Sarah Rees Jones, BA (Oxon), DPhil (York), FRHistS, FSA

Office: Kings' Manor, K/G183
Tel: Internal 3943, External (01904) 43-3943
Fax: (01904) 433918
e-mail: srrj1@york.ac.uk

Biography

Sarah Rees Jones is a senior lecturer in Medieval History and recent co-director of the Centre for Medieval Studies. She works on medieval urban history, with special interests in the history of citizenship and townplanning. She is a member of the Medieval Urban Household Research Project and of the York Archaeological Trust.

Research interests

The major focus of Sarah Rees Jones’ current and future research interests is in urban society and culture in England between the Norman Conquest and the Reformation. She is currently completing a monograph on Medieval York between the Norman Conquest and the Black Death which investigates changes in the use and conception of property in the city from the wealthiest landlords to the most transient subtenants, and uses this material to reassess the development of collective communities in the city from individual households to communities of civic and ecclesiastical government. Her contributions to the forthcoming Historic Towns Atlas for York, her work with the York Archaeological Trust and her involvement in a series of conferences on the shire towns of England 1000-1200 provide a continuing platform for this work on English towns in the central middle ages. In March 2010, together with Sethina Watson, she is organising an international interdisciplinary conference on York 1190: Jews and Others in the Wake of Massacre with financial support from the British Academy.

Her next project is focused on developing better access to archival resources for the study of historic cities, especially York. A grant from JISC has enabled the organisation of a workshop on 'The Cultural Heritage of Historic European Cities and Public Participatory GIS' and she is currently developing a consortium of scholars with similar interests through ISTHMUS.

A further focus of her research is the history of domesticity in the middle ages. She is the organiser of the Medieval Household Research Group at York, which has proved a useful forum for new research projects at PhD and postdoctoral level. These interests are now being developed in collaboration with the York Archaeological Trust in a project on material cultures of urban domesticity and poverty over the longue durée which was awarded three AHRC collaborative PhD awards on ‘Possession, consumption and choice: three studies of the material culture of domestic goods in York and Yorkshire 1400-1900’ together with Natasha Glaisyer and Kate Giles (Archaeology).

Resources available for research students in York

Sarah Rees Jones has supervised ten successful PhD students on a range of topics relating to medieval English social and cultural history including David J. F. Crouch, Christian Liddy, Debbie Cannon, Charlotte Carpenter, Sharon Wells, Matthew Holford, Pam Hartshorne, Jayne Rimmer and Louise Wheatley.

The J.B. Morrell, King’s Manor and York Minster Libraries contain excellent collections of journals, secondary works and printed primary sources to support research in medieval English urban and rural history. The city also houses four major collections of medieval archives for the city and the northern province, including exceptionally rich collections of ecclesiastical, civic, and guild records. Other local archives contain major medieval collections for the urban and rural history of Yorkshire and the north. Students undertaking research degrees may also want to take advantage of resources both nearby both in the British Library Lending Division at nearby Boston Spa and in the archives of North Yorkshire (Northallerton) and West Yorkshire ( Leeds). York has excellent communication links to libraries in Leeds, Manchester and elsewhere in the North, and is conveniently placed for research in London.

Selected publications

  • Medieval Title Deeds for the City of York, 1080-1530, (computer work plus documentation) Colchester: ESRC Data Archive, 1996, SN:3527.
  • The Database of Medieval Title Deeds for the City of York: a guide for users. (York, 1996).

Edited books

  • The Government of Medieval York, (Borthwick Studies in History, 3, 1997).
  • R. Marks, A.J. Minnis & S. Rees Jones (eds), Courts and Regions in Medieval Europe (Boydell and Brewer, 2000).
  • R. Horrox & S. Rees Jones (eds), Pragmatic Utopias; ideals and communities, 1200-1630, (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 2001).
  • Learning and Literacy in Medieval England and Abroad, Utrecht Studies in Medieval Literacy 3 (Turnhout: Brepols, 2003).
  • with Isabel Davis & Miriam Muller, Love, Marriage and Family Ties in the Later Middle Ages, International Medieval Research 11 (Turnhout: Brepols, 2003).
  • with Cordelia Beattie & Anna Maslakovic, The Medieval Household in Christian Europe, International Medieval Research 12 (Turnhout: Brepols, 2003) - including authored contribution: ‘The Household and Political Power’.

Articles (selected)

  • 'The historical background', in The Jewish burial ground at Jewbury; by J.M. Lilley, G. Stroud. D.R. Brothwell and M.H. Williamson. The Archaeology of York, AY 12/3, (York, Council for British Archaeology, 1994).
  • '"A peler of the Holy Cherch": Margery Kempe and the Bishops', in Jocelyn-Wogan-Browne et al. (eds.) Medieval Women: Texts and Contexts in Late Medieval Britain (Brepols, 2000).
  • 'Household, work and the problem of mobile labour: the regulation of labour in medieval English towns', in J. Goldberg & M. Ormrod (eds), The Problem of Labour, (Boydell and Brewer, 2001).
  • 'Thomas More’s Utopia and Medieval London', in Horrox & Rees Jones (eds), Pragmatic Utopias, (CUP, 2001).
  • ‘Women’s influence on the design of the urban home’ in Mary C. Erler and Maryanne Kowaleski (eds.)Gendering the Master Narrative: Women and Power in the Middle Ages ( Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 2003), pp. 190-211.
  • With Felicity Riddy, ‘Female domestic piety and the public sphere: the Bolton Hours of York,’ in Anneke Mulder-Bakke and Jocelyn Wogan-Browne (eds), Women and the Christian Tradition (Turnhout: Brepols, 2006).
  • ‘ Richard Scrope, the Bolton Hours and the Church of St Martin in Micklegate: Reconstructing a Holy Neighbourhood in Later Medieval York’ in P.J.P. Goldberg (ed) RichardScrope, Archbishop and Martyr (Donington: Shaun Tyas, 2007), pp. 214-36.
  • ‘Building Domesticity: Urban Housing in England before the Black Death’ forthcoming in P. J. P. Goldberg and M. Kowaleski (eds), Domesticity: Home, Housing and Household in Medieval England (Cambridge University Press, 2008)

Last Updated: October 23, 2009 | srrj1@york.ac.uk

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