Lords and Peasants in a Changing Society is a history of the large
Church estate of Worcester from its foundation until the Reformation,
and is a full-length study of an estate centred in the West Midlands.
The medieval bishops of Worcester were landed magnates with manors
scattered over three counties, from the outskirts of Bristol to north
Worcestershire. This study uses the plentiful records of the bishopric
to define and explain long-term social and economic changes in this
section of the medieval countryside. Attention is divided equally
between the economy of the lords and developments among the peasantry of
the estate. In dealing with the lords, consideration is given to the
political and social pressures that led to the increase and subsequent
loss of land in the estate during the early Middle Ages; the formulation
of management policies, particularly in the difficult years after the
setbacks of the fourteenth century; and the relationship between income
and expenditure.