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Few people would
question the need for scientists or engineers, engaged upon new
projects, to keep abreast of the development of knowledge and thinking
within their subjects. It is less generally understood that an equivalent
requirement applies to historical writing. Too often discredited
interpretations are repeated and perpetuated uncritically.
'Facts' and
'Truth' are not very helpful words. Written history is an interpretation
of evidence and therefore uncertain. Interpretation should be rigorous
but it will always be open to review as more information becomes
available. Evidence must be looked at carefully - 'Artists' impressions'
are often just that, reality may have been adjusted for effect.
People often wrote with a particular audience in mind, and to represent
themselves in a good light. And we all know how fallible are newspaper
reports.
There is nevertheless
some good reading available on Blythburgh history. Together with
the study of Directories (1793 onwards) these suggestions will help
to separate history from mystery!
Timothy Beardsworth,
'The flint-work inscription under the east window of Blythburgh
church' Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and
History, XXXVIII (1993)
M. Janet Becker,
Blythburgh, (Halesworth, 1935)
Martin Carver,
The Age of Sutton Hoo, (Woodbridge, 1992)
H. Munro Cautley,
Suffolk Churches, (5th ed. Woodbridge, 1982)
J. B. Clare,
Wenhaston and Bulcamp, Suffolk, (Halesworth, 1903)
David Dymond
and Edward Martin (eds), An Historical Atlas of Suffolk,
(Ipswich, 1988)
David Dymond
and Peter Northeast, A History of Suffolk, (2nd ed. Chichester,
1995)
David Dymond
and Roger Virgoe, 'The Reduced Population and Wealth of early
Fifteenth-Century Suffolk', Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute
of Archaeology and History, XXXVI (1986)
Thomas Gardner,
An Historical Account of Dunwich, Blithburgh and Southwold,
(London, 1754)
G. L. Gomme
(ed.), Topographical History of Staffordshire and Suffolk,
(London, 1899)
C. Harper-Bill
(ed.), Blythburgh Priory Cartulary, (2 vols, Woodbridge,
1980 and 1981)
Birkin Haward,
Suffolk Medieval Church Arcades, (Ipswich, 1993)
Lord Francis
Hervey (ed.) Suffolk in the Seventeenth Century, (London,
1902)
John Kirby,
The Suffolk Traveller, (2nd ed. London, 1764)
Rachel Lawrence,
Southwold River, (Exeter, 1990; new edn. Southwold, 1997).
D. MacCulloch,
Suffolk and the Tudors (Oxford, 1986)
Judith Middleton-Stewart,
Inward Purity and Outward Splendour: Death and Remembrance in
the Deanery of Dunwich, Suffolk, 1370-1547,(Woodbridge, 2001)
J. W. Newby,
The Patrick Stead Hospital ... with notes on the Blythburgh and
District Hospital, (Halesworth, 1964)
Colin Richmond,
John Hopton. A Fifteenth-Century Suffolk Gentleman, (Cambridge,
1981)
Norman Scarfe,
Suffolk in the Middle Ages, (Woodbridge, 1986); The Suffolk
Landscape, (London, 1972)
John Shaw, 'The
Finance and Construction of the East Anglian Houses of Industry',
Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History,
XXXVII (1992)
The Rev. Alfred
Suckling, The History and Antiquities of the Hundreds of Blything
and part of Lothingland, (London, 1847)
Peter Warner,
Greens, Commons and Clayland Colonization. The Origins and Development
of Green-side Settlement in East Suffolk, (Leicester, 1987),
and The Origins of Suffolk,(Manchester, 1996); Bloody
Marsh: A Seventeenth-Century Village in Crisis, (Macclesfield,
2000)
Arthur Young,
General View of the Agriculture of the County of Suffolk,
(London, 1813, facsimile 1969)
A Survey
of Suffolk Parish History, (Ipswich, 1990)
Alan Mackley, Blythburgh, rev. July 2001
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