New short film explores Chester’s vital trade role in Middle Ages.

The new video is presented by Dr Katherine Wilson, Senior Lecturer in Medieval History in the Department of History and Archaeology.

Share
New short film explores Chester’s vital trade role in Middle Ages.

Dr Katherine Wilson, from the University of Chester, at the Water Tower on the City Walls.

A University of Chester academic is placing the spotlight on the city’s important role in a global network of trade and commerce during the Middle Ages.

In a new video and blog, Dr Katherine Wilson, Senior Lecturer in Medieval History in the Department of History and Archaeology, takes viewers and readers around the city to see buildings and objects still remaining which evidence its status as an interconnected and international place through the period.

These include the often overlooked, stunning Water Tower on Chester’s City Walls built in the 14th Century when Chester, Cheshire was a major port. During the Middle Ages, the Tower stood in the River Dee and numerous ships from France, Spain, Ireland and Germany would come to unload cargoes of wine, furs and skins before they were traded at markets and fairs within Chester.

Dr Wilson also highlights the reminders of the wealthy merchants who lived and traded in the city - and ends her historical tour at the Grosvenor Museum to discuss an intriguing object found in archaeological excavations which further illustrates Chester’s commercial importance.

She said: “As I explore in the short film and blog, the Water Tower, merchants’ houses and objects in the city remind us to look closely at Chester in the Middle Ages. If we do so, we can see a thriving international, connected city with global trade links.

“Students of History at Chester can study this medieval past and also become a part of on-going research by myself and the Grosvenor Museum in Chester to examine the city as a significant node in a word-wide network of trade and commerce.”

The video and blog ‘An International City: Chester in the Middle Ages’ are the third in the popular 'Global History in One City' series, which examines the long, rich and diverse history of Chester.

To read the blog click here.