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Gavin Smith

Gavin Smith is the author of Livelihood and Resistance: Peasants and the Politics of Land in Peru (1989); Confronting the Present: Towards a Politically Engaged Anthropology (1999); and, with Susana Narotzky, Immediate Struggles: People, Power and Place in Rural Spain (2006). He is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Toronto.

Citater

Olesia Rohar citeretfor 2 år siden
While monasteries were very important centres of brewing, professional, secular beer-making activities spread across Europe, and during the mid-fourteenth century the German city of Hamburg was a world leader in brewing, though a series of catastrophic wars meant that it was really only during the eighteenth century that the production of beer on a commercial scale regained its former prominence.
Olesia Rohar citeretfor 2 år siden
By that time, Germany’s still surviving Reinheitsgebot or ‘purity law’ of 1516 was widely in force, specifying that beer should be made from only water, barley and hops.
Olesia Rohar citeretfor 2 år siden
In Britain, brewing was established as an organized, secular activity by the mid-fifteenth century, with brewers being granted their first royal charter of incorporation in 1445 by King Henry VI, which formalized a long-standing trade guild.
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