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Medieval Society and Economy

Beneath the politics of kings and popes lay the everyday world of medieval people — peasants and lords, townsfolk and merchants, women and men, the religious and the laity — and the agrarian and commercial economy that sustained them.

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Definition

Medieval society and economy denotes the social structures, economic systems, and lived experience of medieval Europe — the organization of labour, land, trade, and household, and the relations among social groups — studied across the early, high, and late Middle Ages.

Scope

This thematic area covers the social and economic history of medieval Europe across the period: rural society and the peasantry, the agrarian economy, the growth of towns, trade, and the 'commercial revolution', social orders and mobility, religious and intellectual life as social phenomena, and the history of gender, family, and everyday life.

Sub-topics

Core questions

  • How was medieval society ordered, and how rigid were its divisions?
  • How did the agrarian and commercial economy develop?
  • What was daily life like for peasants, townspeople, and elites?
  • How did gender, family, and religion structure social life?

Key theories

Commercial revolution
Robert Lopez's thesis that medieval Europe, especially from around 950 to 1350, underwent a 'commercial revolution' in trade, credit, and business organization that transformed the economy and prefigured later capitalism.
Annales social history
The Annales-school approach exemplified by Duby and Le Goff, which shifted attention from events and rulers to long-term structures, mentalities, work, and everyday life, reshaping how medieval society is studied.

History

Medieval social and economic history was transformed by the French Annales school, which foregrounded structures and mentalities over high politics. Duby's work on rural society, Lopez's on commerce, and Le Goff's on time, work, and culture, alongside later social and gender historians, established the field's emphasis on the broad experience of medieval people.

Debates

Drivers of medieval economic growth
Historians debate whether medieval economic expansion was driven mainly by commerce and towns, by agrarian and demographic change, or by institutions, and how to weigh these against later contraction.

Key figures

  • Georges Duby
  • Robert S. Lopez
  • Jacques Le Goff
  • Steven A. Epstein

Related topics

Seminal works

  • lopez1976
  • duby1968
  • legoff1980

Frequently asked questions

What were the 'three orders' of medieval society?
A widely used medieval model dividing society into those who pray (clergy), those who fight (nobility), and those who work (peasants), though real society was far more complex and varied.
What was the medieval commercial revolution?
A long expansion of trade, towns, money, credit, and business techniques across high-medieval Europe, sometimes seen as laying groundwork for later European commercial economies.

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