
Medieval People
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Narrated by:
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Roe Kendall
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By:
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Eileen Power
About this listen
There are full-length portraits of Bodo, a Frankish peasant in the time of Charlemagne (9th century); Marco Polo, the Venetian traveler; Madame Eglentyne, the Prioress of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales; the 15-year-old wife of a 14th century Parisian bourgeois; and two English merchants of the 15th century, Thomas Betson of the wool trade and Thomas Paycocke of Coggeshall, an Essex clothier.
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What listeners say about Medieval People
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
- Gwen Brogdon
- 11-02-05
Medieval People
I thought it was very informative and gave a good picture of what life was like.
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3 people found this helpful
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Overall
- BATFS
- 05-07-08
great listen
I'm not a dedicated student of the age, but I dabble. this is pleasantly presented and informative in a non-scholarly level manner. I enjoyed it immensely. Glimpse life in an age misrepresented frequently, but don't expect too many details, it's a short story covering a wide range of lifestyles.
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6 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Chi-Hung
- 02-03-09
A classic...but...
There is a reason why this book is a classic, written in 1924 when Rankian history was still in its full glory, this represent an pioneer attempt to write a history from below, unfortunately, social history do seldom make interesting audiobooks for lay listener or readers, people seldom find prices of wool or domestic lives interesting.
I found this book focus too much on the High middle ages, as oppose to middle age proper, it could have focused more on the churchman instead of the nuns, it could have touched on the feelings of the pikesmen instead of Marco Polo, and why was Marco Polo even mentioned anyway, he's hardly representative of the "People."
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9 people found this helpful
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Overall
- E&M DeSpain
- 08-13-05
Wonderful Book
I thought this book was an interesting insight into the lives of every-day sort of Midieval People. Almost every story from the age is of some noble person, but the real people, the real back-breaking labor that built those beautiful churches, monastaries, and events that were so important were ordinary people. Insightful. Tended to be a little bit slow in parts, but worth the journey.
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3 people found this helpful
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Overall
- brett
- 08-29-07
Really Good
This is one of my favorite audiobooks. I highly recommend it. It is a very personable and colorful look at ordinary life in Medieval Europe. The narrator, Roe Kendell is perfect here. Im hoping to find another audiobook like this soon
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3 people found this helpful
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- Jonah
- 06-15-20
Good profiles of a variety of medieval people
Despite the generally well-written profiles of a nice variety of medieval people, I didn't feel the author provided striking insights into the heart of the medieval mind. Indeed, I felt that I didn't learn much more than I would have gotten from Hollywood movies that take place during roughly the same period. This may be because of the author's method, which is to hew closely to the material evidence, like church inventories.
Nothing factually jarring in this book. It all felt authoritative and somewhat interesting. But it didn't add up to a compelling portrait.
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- IowaGreyhound
- 01-24-23
Fantastic journey to the Middle Ages
Eileen Powers does a magnificent job of bringing real people in medieval times to life. This book is the next best thing to a time machine to help the reader understand and feel what it was like to live in the middle ages. Her insights on Chaucer characters are enlightening. As she covers people in different areas of society the reader comes to a true understanding of what life was like for each of these people and their families and contemporaries. I love this book so much I bought a hard copy to have as a handy reference. I look forward to reading her other books in the near future. If you want to experience life in medieval times I highly recommend this book. One word of caution, as with Chaucer, some parts are quite bawdy and a bit too explicit for young readers.
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Overall
- Donald
- 07-27-05
Interested in the English wool trade?
This is a scholarly book with many quotes from medieval texts to stupify the listener. The book's pace picks up a little with the research on the Prioress, Madame Eglentyne, of Chaucer fame and then ends with dreary minutes passed in listening to the letters of wool merchants. It would have much more interesting to hear the story with the long quotes placed out of reach of the ear and into the marginalia. Hopefully the reader understands French and archaic English(read untranslated Chaucer to get an idea)as there are long quotes in French and archaic English.
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5 people found this helpful