This is an ambitious
book, attempting as it does to span the whole of Europe and cover
six hundred years of urbanism. It is also ambitious in trying
to bridge the conventional divide drawn between the ‘medieval’
and ‘modern’ ages usually placed by historians and
archaeologists somewhere between the fourteenth and sixteenth
centuries. The question is, does the book succeed in these aims?
The short answer, I think, is yes, but it does so with two main
shortcomings. One concern is the balance struck between detail
and generalisation, and the other is the book’s overall
coherence. Both are perhaps a price that has to be paid for dealing
with such a long time period and broad geographical area, which
leads me to ask whether a project of this kind can really ever
be successful? And yet, the need exists to occasionally take a
longer-term view, especially when it comes to trying to understand
how urban Europe was made – the main aim of David Nicholas’s
book – into what it is today.
Urban Europe 1100-1700 is presented thematically, with seven
chapters dealing with particular topics that range across this
chosen time-period. An alternative would have been to have had
one chapter per century, each comprising elements of the topics
that Nicholas examines, such as social structure and corporate
urbanism, enabling the reader to see for themselves how a seventeenth-century
town differed from, say, a twelfth-century one, or indeed how
certain aspects of urbanism remained constant across time. Instead
the book opens with a couple of chapters that attempt to look
at the longue durée of second millennium European urbanism.
The first of these is scene-setting and tries to set out what
defines a town, as well as some general demographics of urban
population change across the period.
Here two issues emerge which I think might have been addressed
more directly: one is what defines a town from a city, while the
second concerns what defines the ‘medieval’ from the
‘modern’. In vernacular English, for example, the
word ‘city’ was becoming commonplace by the fifteenth
century, yet the word ‘town’ persisted in a generic
sense to mean an inhabited place – rural or urban. Nicholas
slides between both ‘town’ and ‘city’
in his usage. There is also scope to discuss more specifically
the perceived differences between ‘medieval’ and ‘modern’
urbanism and urbanisation – for a book such as this, with
its broad temporal perspective, surely is a basis from which to
challenge and even overthrow these very periodisations?
The second of the two introductory chapters draws upon what Nicholas
describes as ‘geographical theory’.(p. viii) By this
he (by and large) means locational theory, used especially though
not exclusively by human geographers to explain patterns of urban
hierarchies and networks.(1)
Influenced by the likes of economic giants such as Von Thünen
and Christaller, Nicholas looks at the relationship between the
city and its region, or hinterland, and its place in a broader
urban system. This subject is a book in itself. Indeed, geographers
were writing such books in the 1960s, Dickinson’s The
City Region in Western Europe being an example of this
genre in practice.(2) However,
today’s urban geographers have abandoned central place theory
and rank size rule as explanatory tools, and prefer instead the
socio-spatial theoretical ideas of Henri Lefebvre, Michel Foucault,
Walter Benjamin, Georg Simmel and Bruno Latour.(3)
So Nicholas’s use of ‘geographical theory’ in
the chapter on the city and region is not quite so innovative
as is made out in the Preface, and may even be viewed by some
to be somewhat out-dated, although the empirical examples he uses
in this discussion – for example, Cologne and London –
are drawn from recent research.
With the remainder of the book, Nicholas moves from looking at
inter-urban relationships to intra-urban characteristics and internal
organisation. This is accomplished in four chapters that cover,
in sequence, urban physiognomy, politics, society, and economy.
Of these the author seems least at home with the first, and more
confident on the more socio-economic aspects of urbanism to be
found in the later chapters. This is understandable, considering
Nicholas’ particular expertise, but unfortunately it leaves
the chapter on ‘the morphology of the urban plan’
looking weak and vulnerable. This is an area where recent geographical
study might have helped, for urban morphology – the study
of urban form – has increasingly begun to show how the layouts
of towns and cities of Europe contain evidence in their forms
of their origins and development, which when tied into written
accounts and archaeological evidence provides a picture of the
characteristics of urban landscapes and the processes that shaped
them over time. Instead, Nicholas unfortunately falls back onto
the artificial and unhelpful distinction that is often made between
‘organic and planned towns’.(pp. 62-8) Conzen questioned
this distinction long ago, and yet so often it still appears in
print.(4)
It is unhelpful for two reasons. First, it oversimplifies the
complexity of urban forms and their formation. Second, it draws
a false connection between irregularity in form and ‘organic
growth’ on the one hand, and regularity in form and ‘planned
growth’ on the other. Urban planning takes many different
forms and occurs at a variety of social levels and need not be
manifest morphologically as ‘regular’ layouts of streets
and plots. Conzen and other geographers have shown how past and
present urban landscapes are composite in form, that is they are
made up of discrete areas that reflect phases of development,
even in cases of so-called ‘new towns’.(5)
These phases of development vary in terms of their degree of morphological
regularity, and yet at one level or another are nevertheless ‘planned’.
Some degree of ‘planning’ is always at work in the
making of urban landscapes, so to categorise towns according to
whether their plans are ‘organic’ or ‘planned’
is to obscure the processes that formed them. ‘Town foundation’
is thus but one aspect of urban planning, and an examination of
the forms of ‘new towns’ reveals great variety rather
than conformity. This chapter could have benefited from more engagement
with recent geographical (and historical) study of ‘the
morphology of the urban plan’ therefore, and in doing so
curious generalisations might have been avoided, such as ‘the
plans of the earliest cities were extremely irregular’.(p.
91).
If the first three chapters of the book might be seen to owe
rather more to geography than history, the reverse is true for
the last three, for here we see Nicholas providing a highly readable
and thorough examination of what people did in towns and cities
– how they lived and worked. Quite a lot of this, looking
at the footnotes, seems to borrow on the author’s previous
works – and why not, since they are good sources to use
– and again there are some odd generalisations (for example,
‘prostitution was rampant’ (p. 135), ‘streets
and squares of the pre-modern city were thus noxious and dangerous’
(p. 160)) that might be queried; but on the whole the student
who may be reading this will be well-informed on certain topics,
such as how citizenry was formed, or how urban inhabitants were
educated.
All the time, though, the temporal balance seems to shift more
towards the earlier part of the book’s period than the latter,
and the attention paid to the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
especially begins to get reduced down a little to the familiar
topics of religious discord, or the growth of printing. This again
might be an argument for adopting more of a chronological approach
in a book such as this – that the period being covered is
somehow too stretched to work as a set of separate themes, for
doing so means having to treat with some superficiality the specificity
of certain moments in European urban history. It also has the
effect of lessening the overall coherence of the book, for by
the end of it we have lost sight of the introductory themes of
long-term change set out at the start. The impression, then, given
by the latter three chapters is that while they no doubt reflect
(at least as far as the medieval material is concerned) the author’s
true expertise, they form a second book, distinct from the ‘book’
created by the first few chapters: it is as if the first three
chapters are telling one type of story, and the second three tell
it in another way. The short concluding chapter with its a long
title requires perhaps a little more extended reflection to help
bring the two halves closer together.
This book is undoubtedly a useful addition to a growing stock
of recent books on ‘pre-modern’ European urban life.
It sits alongside offerings such as Dyer’s Making
a Living in the Middle Ages, Schofield and Vince’s
second and Europeanised edition of Medieval Towns,
as well as my own Urban Life in the Middle Ages,
among others.(6) While each
of these books approach the subject of medieval urbanism from
particular disciplinary perspectives, namely, history (Dyer),
archaeology (Schofield and Vince) and geography (Lilley), they
also blur traditional disciplinary boundaries. Nicholas’s
book is different to each of these in that it tries to cross the
conventional medieval-modern divide (the others are concerned
with the ‘middle ages’ per se), but it shares their
interdisciplinarity.
To some extent this blurring of disciplinary boundaries is to
be commended, for much is to be learned from sharing knowledge
across history, archaeology and geography – not least when
trying to make sense of remote periods of the past for which evidence
is often patchy and can be usefully drawn together in ways that
compliment each other (though not always of course). But there
are difficulties and dangers in straying away from one’s
own disciplinary territory, as it were, and Nicholas’ book
(and mine too I might add) perhaps begins to highlight these.
At its simplest there is the matter of language, of using particular
concepts from other disciplines. For example, Nicholas uses ‘morphology
of the urban plan’ as the title for a chapter that in reality
covers far more than the shape of town plans, dealing as it does
with the ‘occupational geography of the pre-modern city’.(pp.
75-9) If the focus of the chapter is the morphology of the urban
plan, then I feel more ought to have been included on the formation
and transformation of urban landscapes. But of course –
as a geographer – I am perhaps bound to pick up on those
points where it seems Nicholas is straying into ‘my field’,
which raises the question of the appropriateness of trying to
approach a subject by crossing disciplinary territories.
The broader issue, then, is how best to incorporate ideas, concepts
and material from disciplines other to one’s own. Again,
Nicholas’s book highlights the difficulty posed by this,
in the way he draws upon ‘geographical theory’ long
abandoned by academic geographers. While this in itself is no
criticism of Nicholas – there is always more mileage to
be had from applying old theories to new contexts and data –
it means that geographers reading Urban Europe (as indeed they
should) may view the book as ‘out-dated’, simply because
of the use made of approaches that were around in the 1960s rather
than those with which human geographers are currently working.
I was conscious of this issue myself when writing Urban Life in
the Middle Ages; how might historians view my attempts at raking
over the work of Tait and Ballard, for example? Would this be
considered in the same light that geographers now see the likes
of Christaller and Von Thünen? The tide of theoretical faddishness
within geography, and some other social science disciplines, does
not seem to ebb and flow as fast in medieval history, and this,
perhaps with some irony, makes it more acceptable for a historian
to draw upon old geographical concepts than it does for a geographer.
Interdisciplinarity is an important issue for medievalists quite
simply because the field depends upon it. Moreover, interdisciplinarity
is being pushed in the UK by the funding councils, as well as
by some HE institutions, as well as the publishers of our work.
The latter seem to favour it as a selling point. Palgrave thus
informs us that Urban Europe ‘will appeal to
students and scholars of history, geography and urban studies’
as well as ‘sociologists and political economists’
and ‘urban planners’. Having read the book I do wonder
whether it would really appeal to all these groups. I made similar
claims for Urban Life in the Middle Ages, but are
they justified? I am doubtful. Indeed a geography student will
not pick up either Nicholas’ book or mine quite simply because
at the moment UK geography undergraduates (and sadly academic
geographers more generally) just do not deal with the period of
the middle ages (with rare exceptions), and typically venture
only as far back as the 1700s.(7)
The same may be said for sociology, urban studies and urban planning,
all of which seem to me to hardly care for the middle ages at
all.(8) So while publishers,
institutions and funding bodies may all be pushing the need for
greater interdisciplinarity, and while we as authors may use cross-disciplinary
approaches and recognise their worth, and perhaps advocate that
our books will have broad appeal, the reality is that in teaching
and research disciplinary territories are more impervious than
they are permeable – and doubtless all the more so because
of the way recent RAEs ring-fence disciplines.
One field of medieval study where intellectual permeability genuinely
seems to work is archaeology. As a subject area archaeology appears
to draw happily from both geography and history, and at the same
time also contribute to debates in each. This is to be seen clearly
in Dyer’s Making a Living, for example, as well as in Schofield
and Vince’s Medieval Towns, especially regarding the use
of palaeo-environmental evidence (in the former) and documentary
sources (in the latter). The work of archaeologists has less of
a presence in Urban Europe than it perhaps might, and it is curious
to note that among the wide number of disciplines the book is
marketed towards, archaeology does not feature.
So because it seems that there is interesting work going on elsewhere,
and because we are being led to do so by funders and publishers,
we medievalists seek to look beyond our own disciplinary territories.
But the danger is that what we borrow from other disciplines is
at best seen to be out of date (especially by the discipline being
borrowed from) or at worst ill-treated (by being misappropriated).
This is a broad issue that those concerned with trying to write
about aspects of medieval urban life need to grapple with, and
should do so in an honest and open way that recognises the positive
benefits of working across disciplines, but which also shows awareness
of the pitfalls and possible shortcomings of so doing.
All in all, David Nicholas’s book manages to cover a lot
of ground in a relatively slim volume. It provides a good introduction
and does try to give the student a broad overview of a very formative
period of European urban history. Where I suppose I have most
problems is with the earlier parts of the book, in part because
I think the earlier chapters sit a little oddly in relation to
the later ones, and in part because I think the attempts at bringing
in some geography into what is ostensibly often the realm of history
do not quite succeed. I admit, this criticism comes down to my
own particular views of what geography is, and the feeling that
Nicholas’s idea of a geographical approach does not tally
with mine as a geographer. Geography as a discipline has moved
on from rank size rule, central place theory and the like, and
yet to read Urban Europe a student (most likely of
history) may be forgiven for thinking that this is still what
urban geography is all about. There are more interesting contributions
contemporary human geography has to offer to debates on urban
life in the middle ages – to do with culture, landscape,
identity, politics, gender, flows of ideas and commerce, to name
but a few – than those that are represented in this book.
But equally I am aware that interdisciplinarity is the way forward,
and the fact that historians are prepared to learn from geographers,
and geographers from historians, is surely something that should
be celebrated. To this end, notwithstanding my particular concerns
over Nicholas’s handling of geography, Urban Europe
is to be commended to students of both disciplines, as well as
to those of others too, for at the end of the day, any book that
raises the profile of the importance of studying the middle ages
to a wider audience deserves to be a success.
March 2004
Notes
1. H. Carter, The Study
of Urban Geography, 4th edition (London: Arnold, 1995).
2. R. E. Dickinson, The
City Region in Western Europe (London: Routledge and Kegan
Paul, 1967).
3. For example see D. Gregory,
Geographical Imaginations (Oxford: Blackwell, 1994);
E. Soja, Postmetropolis (Oxford: Blackwell, 2000);
H. Thrift and A. Amin, Cities: Reimagining the Urban
(Cambridge: Polity Press, 2002).
4. M. R. G. Conzen, ‘The
study of town plans’, in The Study of Urban History,
ed. H. J. Dyos (London: Arnold, 1968), 113-30. Examples being
A. E. J. Morris, History of Urban Form (Harlow: Prentice
Hall, 1994) and P. M. Hohenberg and L. H. Lees, The Making
of Urban Europe, 1000-1950 (Cambridge MA: Harvard University
Press, 1995).
5. Conzen, op. cit.. See also
T. R. Slater, ‘English medieval new towns with composite
town plans: evidence from the Midlands’, in The Built
Form of Western Cities, ed. T. R. Slater (Leicester: Leicester
University Press, 1990), 60-82; A. Simms, ‘The early origins
and morphological inheritance of European towns’, in Urban
Landscapes: International Perspectives, eds J. W. R. Whitehand
and P. J. Larkham (London: Routledge, 1992), 23-42; K. D. Lilley,
‘Mapping the medieval city: plan analysis and urban history’,
Urban History, 27 (2000), 5-30.
6. C. Dyer, Making a Living
in the Middle Ages (London, Yale University Press, 2002)
[editor’s note: for a review of this book on these pages,
please click here]; J. Schofield and
A. Vince, Medieval Towns, 2nd edition (London: Continuum,
2003); K. D. Lilley, Urban Life in the Middle Ages
(Basingstoke/New York: Palgrave, 2002).
7. For example, see B. Graham
and C. Nash, eds, Modern Historical Geographies (Harlow:
Prentice Hall, 2000).
8. P. Hall, Cities in
Civilization (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1998).
Professor Nicholas's
response. |