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Monday, 7 July 2014

Essex Through The Ages: Conference at Essex Record Office, Saturday 12 July 2014

The Essex Society for Archaeology and History has received details of the programme for the Conference this Saturday.  We will be there with our book stall.

ESSEX THROUGH THE AGES
Tracing the past using manorial documents
Essex Record Office | 12 July 2014
In association with the Manorial Documents Register
With Support from East of England Regional Archive Council and the Friends of Historic Essex

A one-day conference on tracing the past using manorial documents
Essex Record Office, Wharf Road, Chelmsford, CM2 6YT

10.30 Registration, tea and coffee
10.50 Manors and Manorial Documents. What are they?
Prof Nigel Saul

11.50 The national Manorial Documents Register project
Liz Hart

12.30 Lunch
Including an opportunity to visit a display in the Searchroom of manorial documents from the ERO’s collections

1.30 Highlights from Essex manorial documents
Katharine Schofield

2.10 An Essex Case Study: Stebbing and its Late-Medieval and Tudor Manorial Documentation
Prof L.R. Poos

2.55 Unlocking Stebbing’s History from its Manorial Documentation
Graham Jolliffe

3.10 Questions for Prof Poos and Graham Jolliffe

3.25 Close

Find details of other Essex Record Office talks and workshops at www.essex.gov.uk/EROevents


A little about our speakers

Nigel Saul is Professor of Medieval History at Royal Holloway, University of London, and a member of the national Manorial Documents Committee. He is the author of Richard II (Yale University Press, 1997) and For Honour and Fame: Chivalry in England, 1066-1500 (Bodley Head, 2011). In 2012 he was historical consultant to the BBC4 series on the Hundred Years War, Chivalry and Betrayal. He has worked extensively on manorial sources in his studies of English medieval local society.

Liz Hart has worked at The National Archives (TNA) for 9 years. She is a Senior Adviser (Manorial) in the Private Archives team in Archives Sector Development. She has responsibility for the maintenance of the Manorial Documents Register (MDR) and its development, including the supervision of the county-by-county programme of projects to update and computerise sections of the Register. Previously, she worked for 12 years at the National Monuments Record, the public archive of English Heritage, working with architectural collections (written, drawn and photographic material).

Katharine Schofield read History at Cambridge and undertook her archival qualification at University College, London. She has worked at the Essex Record Office for 25 years and for the last three years she has been the Essex Manorial Document Register Liaison Officer. Katharine’s main areas of interest are Essex in the Little Domesday Book and the medieval history of the county. She is the joint author of Essex Illustrated (Chelmsford, 1997) and recently authored ‘The Medieval Deeds of Colchester Hall, Takeley’, Essex Journal, II (47), 2012, as well as being a regular contributor to the ERO blog and e-newsletter.

L.R. Poos is Professor of History and Dean of Arts and Sciences at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. His Cambridge Ph.D. dissertation studied the Essex manors of Great Waltham and High Easter in the fourteenth century and he continued his Essex research in A rural society after the Black Death: Essex 1350-1525 (1991). His other books include Select cases in manorial courts 1250-1550: Property and family law (with Lloyd Bonfield, Selden Society, 1998), and Lower ecclesiastical jurisdiction in late medieval England: The courts of the Dean and Chapter of Lincoln, 1336-1349, and the Deanery of Wisbech, 1458-1484 (Oxford, 2001). Among his current projects is a critical edition and translation of manorial and parish records from Stebbing, in conjunction with which he is collaborating with Graham Jolliffe of the Stebbing Local History Society to map the local landscape.

Graham Jolliffe is the co-founder and Chairman of the Stebbing Local History Society which was established in 1995. He has done a considerable amount of original research on Stebbing which has been distributed through the society’s own publications. Prior to that he has many years’ experience of history research in Hertfordshire including the co-authorship of Hertfordshire Inns and Public Houses: an Historical Gazetteer. He is currently working closely with Professor Poos to interpret and map the manorial documentary evidence for Stebbing.

More about manors…

See our blog for lots of useful background on manorial documents and how you can use them in your research: www.essexrecordofficeblog.co.uk


This information is issued by

Essex County Council/Essex Record Office

You can contact us in the following ways:

Visit our website: essex.gov.uk/ERO
Search our online catalogue: http://seax.essexcc.gov.uk
Essex Ancestors: www.essexancestors.co.uk
By telephone: 01245 244644
By post:
Essex Record Office, Wharf Road, Chelmsford, CM2 6YT

Read our online magazine at essex.gov.uk/youressex

Follow us on @essexarchive

Find us on facebook.com/EssexRecordOffice

The information contained in this document can be translated, and/or made available in alternative formats, on request. Published June 2014


DS14 4580 

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