Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Influence of the Black Death on the English Monasteries: A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate Divinity School in Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy
Let the reader consult any reliable atlas3 and he cannot fail to notice how many religious houses were massed in the south, central, and south eastern counties oi England. This implies that the monasteries were situated in relatively large numbers where the activities of the nation's life were centered. In bygone centuries many of these institutions em joyed the coveted immunities of isolation. With the true instincts of the 'monk their founders chose islands removed from the mainland of life. But by and by the tides receded and the islands became mainland. Into Norfolk, Suffolk, and Essex, the pioneer monks came appropriating marshy lands subject to inundation.4 Nobody protested against the occupation of what at that time seemed worthless. But by dint of ditch and dyke, some of the richest lands of England were reclaimed by them, and the attendant prosperity converted what was once marsh into one of the most thickly populated areas of the country.
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