History of Yorkshire: County of the Broad Acres

History of Yorkshire: County of the Broad Acres

by David Hey (Author)

Synopsis

In such a large geographical area we find a great deal of diversity of experience and history. Life on the Pennines or the North York Moors has always been very different from life in low-lying agricultural districts such as Holderness or the Humberhead Levels. In many ways, the farmers of the Vale of York have had more in common with those the Midland Plain than with the miners, steel workers and textile workers of their own county. Until relatively recently people felt that they belonged to their own parish and to a wider neighbourhood which was bounded by the nearest market towns and which they called their 'country'. Relatively few people travelled to other parts of Yorkshire or had any contact with the 'strangers' who lived beyond their own district. Although the Elizabethan and Stuart gentry were conscious of belonging to Yorkshire, and outsiders made comments (usually adverse) on Yorkshiremen as a breed apart, ordinary folk did not have this sense of belonging to Yorkshire until quite late in its history. The success of the Yorkshire County Cricket Club from the 1890s onwards seems to have been the great stimulus that united Yorkshire people, and which gave them a sense of their superiority. The history of Yorkshire is more varied than that of any other English county. The changing fortunes of the many different regions of the county - from Pennine moors and valley towns to the flats of Holderness; from industrialised cities to quiet market towns - are a major theme in this important new book. Outsiders may recognise a Yorkshire accent, but local people can place a speaker much more precisely in a particular 'country'. It is this diversity of experience within the historic county of Yorkshire that David Hey seeks to capture in this important and fascinating new book.

$4.23

Save:$26.15 (86%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 472
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Carnegie Publishing Ltd
Published: 15 Oct 2005

ISBN 10: 1859361226
ISBN 13: 9781859361221

Media Reviews
'This is what is called the broad sweep of history. David Hey was set the monumental task of covering all of it on a single canvas and now, nearly seven years later, he has completed the last detail. In his book you will find Neolithic man, Britons, Angles, Roman legions, Vikings, Norman barons, Civil War strife, the workshop of the world, in a superbly illustrated combination of history derived from documents and from what our ancestors left behind to look at... His book will feed the prodigious appetite for local history and archaeology and family origins.' Yorkshire Post Magazine'A Triumph of Local History Writing'This book is magnificent (there is no other word for it), fitting both in scale and quality its subject. Ranging from the Stone Age to the 1990s, it is no mean feat to have captured in 140,000 words the essential history of a county that comprises almost one-eighth of England. David Hey, however, rises to the challenge with a bravura performance that sets a new standard for popular county and regional histories. The book is also visually ravishing. Hey's text is graced by around 500 carefully chosen illustrations, many of them high-definition colour photographs specially taken for the volume ...' [review by Malcolm Chase]
Author Bio
David Hey is Emeritus Professor of Local and Family History at the University of Sheffield, where he taught in the Division of Adult Continuing Education. His recent books include Journeys in Family History (The National Archives, 2004), Medieval South Yorkshire (Landmark, 2003), How Our Ancestors Lived (The National Archives, 2003), Historic Hallamshire (Landmark, 2002) and A History of Penistone (Wharncliffe, 2002). His 'County of the Broad Acres': A History of Yorkshire will be published by Carnegie in 2005. He and his wife live in Dronfield Woodhouse. They have two grown-up children and a granddaughter.