ABSTRACT

Thirty years ago, family life in the past was largely of interest only to some literary historians, antiquarians and those concerned with their own genea­ logies. Today the family is among the essential areas of academic historical interest. This is nowhere more true than for England in the early modern period, between the close of the middle ages and the beginnings of industrial­ isation, an era which has often been seen as a watershed in patterns of social organisation.