Description

Book Synopsis
'Buy my Dish of great Eeles, Any Old Iron take money for, Twelve Pence a Peck Oysters, Buy my fat Chickens, Fair Lemons & Oranges' Marcellus Laroon’s 'The Cryes of the City of London drawne after the Life' presents, in seventy-four striking portraits, a panorama of London’s marginal men and women: street vendors, hustlers and petty criminals together with the shouts (or cries) they used to hawk their wares, as they existed at the end of the seventeenth century. Following an illustrated introduction which sets Laroon’s engravings within the tradition of the Cries, each portrait is beautifully reproduced with a commentary that illuminates the individual street-seller and their trade. The commentaries provide a wealth of detail about their dress, the equipment they used to ply their trade, the meat and drink of those they served and their own diets. This book also mines historical archives for contemporary reports about the colourful and often desperate lives of these hawkers. Drawing on the historic material found in the Burney Collection of English newspapers, this book provides a fascinating insight into the men and women who made their livelihood, legally and illegally, on the streets of England’s capital.

Trade Review
"A welcome addition to the literature on the underprivileged populations of European cities who sold food, sundries, and services. . . . Recommended." * Choice *

Table of Contents
Table of Contents Preface Introduction The Cries Further Reading Notes Acknowledgements Picture Credits Index

Hawkers, Beggars and Quacks: Portraits from The

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    A Hardback by Sean Shesgreen

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      View other formats and editions of Hawkers, Beggars and Quacks: Portraits from The by Sean Shesgreen

      Publisher: Bodleian Library
      Publication Date: 10/09/2021
      ISBN13: 9781851245512, 978-1851245512
      ISBN10: 1851245510

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      'Buy my Dish of great Eeles, Any Old Iron take money for, Twelve Pence a Peck Oysters, Buy my fat Chickens, Fair Lemons & Oranges' Marcellus Laroon’s 'The Cryes of the City of London drawne after the Life' presents, in seventy-four striking portraits, a panorama of London’s marginal men and women: street vendors, hustlers and petty criminals together with the shouts (or cries) they used to hawk their wares, as they existed at the end of the seventeenth century. Following an illustrated introduction which sets Laroon’s engravings within the tradition of the Cries, each portrait is beautifully reproduced with a commentary that illuminates the individual street-seller and their trade. The commentaries provide a wealth of detail about their dress, the equipment they used to ply their trade, the meat and drink of those they served and their own diets. This book also mines historical archives for contemporary reports about the colourful and often desperate lives of these hawkers. Drawing on the historic material found in the Burney Collection of English newspapers, this book provides a fascinating insight into the men and women who made their livelihood, legally and illegally, on the streets of England’s capital.

      Trade Review
      "A welcome addition to the literature on the underprivileged populations of European cities who sold food, sundries, and services. . . . Recommended." * Choice *

      Table of Contents
      Table of Contents Preface Introduction The Cries Further Reading Notes Acknowledgements Picture Credits Index

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