Feeding a City: York

£40.00

ISBN-10 1-903018-02-1

ISBN-13 978-1-903018-02-6

Published Oct 2000

300 pages; hardback

Price £25

Description

Leeds Symposium

A new website for the excellent yearly symposium!
www.leedsfoodsymposium.org.uk

Edited by Eileen White

I am pleased that we are able to publish the proceedings of this important grouping of food historians whose annual meetings at Leeds usually address a cohesive subject, often with regional associations. Two of their conferences were devoted to the matter of food and food supplies in the city of York, from earliest times until the present century. Although a set of conference papers, the method of approach ensures the book will stand alone. The papers include discussions of the archaeological record; Anne Rycraft on the medieval diet and markets; Peter Brears on York guilds and on shopping in York and its supply of the hinterland; Eileen White on the domestic record of the 16th and 17th centuries; Laura Mason on the diet of the working class in Victorian York and on regional foods; W.B. Taylor on the emergence of the confectionery industry; and Hugh Murray on the 19th-century city and its food supplies. The book is graced with many illustrations. Although there have been some impressive monographs on food supply and the British city, notably Scola’s study of Manchester, this volume has a wider range in time and takes in more aspects of the subject than anything I know. York, of course, was a major regional centre from the Roman period onwards.

PDF of the preliminaries, the table of contents and the introduction to the volume Feeding a City