Horse and Man in Early Modern England

Front Cover
Bloomsbury Academic, May 22, 2007 - History - 352 pages


Horses were used for many purposes in Shakespeare's England: for travel, either on horseback or in carriages, for haulage and for pleasure, and for work in the fields. The upper classes were closely involved with horses, for jousting, hunting and racing. Horses was also essential to any army, both as cavalry and to draw supplies and artillery. Horse ownership was, however, much more widespread than might be imagined.



Horse and Man in Early Modern England shows how, in pre-industrial England, horses were bred and trained, what they ate, how much they were worth, how long they lived, and what their owners thought of them.

While they were named individually, and sometimes became favourites, many were worked hard and poorly treated, leading to their early deaths. They were, nevertheless an essential part of the life of the time and are strikingly depicted in literature and art, as well in many other records.

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Contents

Attitudes towards Horses
17
The Training and Treatment of Horses
35
Horse Riding and Status
69
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Peter Edwards is Professor of Early Modern British Social History at the University of Roehampton. He is one of the country's leading scholars working in the field of horses in history, having published a book on the horse trade in Tudor and Stuart England. He also writes on the logistics of seventeenth century warfare and on rural society in England under the Tudors and Stuarts.

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