Elizabeth's London: Everyday Life in Elizabethan London

Elizabeth's London: Everyday Life in Elizabethan London

by Liza Picard (Author)

Synopsis

Like its acclaimed predecessors, RESTORATION LONDON and DR JOHNSON'S LONDON, this book is the result of the author's passionate interest in the practical details of everyday life - and the conditions in which most people lived - so often ignored in conventional history books. The book begins with the River Thames, which - from its surly water-men to its great occasions - played such a central part in the city's life. It moves on to the streets, houses and gardens; cooking, housework and shopping; clothes, jewellery and make-up; health and medicine; sex and food; education, etiquette and hobbies; religion, law and crime.

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More Information

Format: Abridged
Pages: 320
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Orion
Published: 08 May 2003

ISBN 10: 0297607294
ISBN 13: 9780297607298
Book Overview: Vivid social history of London in one of its greatest and most popular periods There will be events and exhibitions in 2003 to mark the 400th anniversary of Elizabeth's death DR JOHNSON'S LONDON was the top-selling history hardback in 12 weeks ending 9 September 2000 (The Bookseller, 24 November 2000) 'Picard has a delicious sense of humour, an insatiable curiosity and an acute eye for detail...A truly wonderful book.' (SYDNEY MORNING HERALD on RESTORATION LONDON) 'With her keen eye for human quirks and human weaknesses, Picard brings the age's tortuous splendours and profound murkiness vividly to life, and does so with great verve and originality.' (THE OBSERVER on DR JOHNSON'S LONDON)

Media Reviews
Her formula ... is a winning one ... Elizabeth's London is, like its predecessors, a storehouse of fascinating information. Every page contains a nugget ... From birth to death, and everything in between, Picard has given us a wide-ranging survey of London and Londoners in an earlier age -- Lucy Moore * DAILY MAIL *
From traffic congestion to cures for kidney stones; from water supplies to wood panelling; from etiquette to immigrants; from gardening to childbirth: it's all here in this captivating portrait of one of the world's greatest cities in its greatest age. For all the easy-going tone, this is a work of impressive learning, full of details of everyday practicalities that most recent history books ignore. Often a revelation, it's invariably a pleasure -- Michael Kerrigan * SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY *
An exuberant book ... a conscientious and scholarly analysis of London's condition in the 16th century, contemplating every civic aspect from the sartorial to the gynaecological. Reading this book is like taking a ride on a marvellously exhilarating time-machine, alive with colour, surprise and sheer merriment -- Jan Morris * NEW STATESMAN *
This riveting account embraces everything from immigration, crime and poor relief, to the invention in 1596 of the water closet. There are fascinating chapters on the naming and shaming of miscreants ... Picard reads with style and grace -- Betty Tadman * SCOTSMAN *
The third of Picard's series of London histories is full of ... evocative images and little gems of information ... Picard is at her most entertaining in describing the agonies of Elizabethan fashion ... Picard's technique of using short entries to cover all aspects of daily life makes her books so rewarding to dip into -- Maureen Waller * THE TIMES *
The reader is taken along the Thames, through the city drains and conduits to the sewers and privies, buildings, gardens and streets, from there to the people who crowded them, and to their complexes and cares. There is much to learn here: how to amputate a leg, or bake a humble pie (deer's entrails with mutton suet). The author has a charming fascination with words and their origins ... This is a vibrant, sparkling insight given with great zest and personality -- Alex Burghart * TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT *
A warts-and-all portrayal of the sights, stinks and cries of this vibrant, teeming and unsanitary city. Every chapter is filled with incident and accident ... Picard's book contains many surprises ... Elizabeth's London provides a wonderfully evocative portrait of this lively, if squalid, city, and is an essential companion to the author's previous books -- Giles Milton * LIVING HISTORY *
Drawing on a variety of sources, including records from Queen Elizabeth I's astrologer, doctors, churchwardens and foreign visitors, Elizabeth's London describes what life was like 400 years ago, not for the royal courtiers we so often see in period dramas, but for ordinary Londoners. It covers all the topics you might expect - such as food, buildings, diseases and religion - as well as the more unusual realities of life during Elizabeth's reign ... Following Dr Johnson's London and Restoration London, Picard again demonstrates her enormous knowledge of, and passion for, London's past -- Les Pickford * GEOGRAPHICAL *
A book that is both historically sound and hysterically funny, this is one to be cherished -- GOOD BOOK GUIDE
Setting out to provide a detailed inventory of daily life in Tudor London ... she is unflappably curious in her sifting through 16th-century lives -- Andrew Holgate * SUNDAY TIMES *
Picard makes spirited use of topographies, diaries, letters, account books, wills and inventories to detail the costs and conditions of this unprecedented expansion ... The author's third guide-book to the capital's past is as highly readable as her earlier examinations of Restoration and Georgian London -- Robin Blake * FINANCIAL TIMES *
An evocative survey of the satisfactions and vexations of life in the capital in the later 16th century * HISTORY TODAY *
Author Bio
Liza Picard was born in 1927. She worked for the Inland Revenue for many years and lived in London, before retiring to Oxford where she now lives.