ABSTRACT

The Landscape of Britain has a uniquely rich historical diversity. In this book explains the processes at work in the evolution of the landscape, pointing out examples of surviving evidence from the past. The landscape of late twentieth-century Britain is the end product of some ten thousand years of human effort directed not only towards satisfying basic physical needs for food and shelter, but also towards expressing profound spiritual and intellectual aspirations, whether by means of burial mounds or churches, schools or monasteries. The author shows how each generation makes its own individual contribution without being able entirely to erase those of its predecessors, however remote or distant in time.

part |2 pages

Part I FOUNDATIONS

chapter 1|31 pages

The land of Britain

chapter 2|26 pages

The first men

chapter 3|29 pages

Roman Britain

part |2 pages

Part II MEDIEVAL BRITAIN

chapter 4|25 pages

People: English, Scots, and Welsh

chapter 6|39 pages

Ideas: the church in the landscape

part |2 pages

Part III TOWARDS THE MODERN WORLD

chapter 7|36 pages

Early modern Britain

chapter 8|36 pages

Georgian Britain

chapter 9|65 pages

Victorian Britain