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Through the Windows of an Ordinary House: A History of England

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Through the Windows of an Ordinary House: A History of England

By: Ian Mortimer
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This book tells the story of Mearsdon, the house where Ian Mortimer lives in Moretonhampstead, on the edge of Dartmoor. We very rarely have a continuous account of a particular place over a long stretch of history, but Mortimer has a documentary record of all the owners who lived there since the 1260s – although the origins of the building probably date back to the eleventh century.

Blending the broadest national history and the most intimate local events with a description of changing daily life from the Norman Conquest to the present day, Mortimer acquaints us with the people who passed through the house – from its first known owner, John the Palmer, to the folklore collector Charlie Laycock, who turned the house into a museum in the early twentieth century, to Mortimer’s family living there today. And along the way he shows how national events – from the Black Death to the Prayerbook Rebellion, from the Civil Wars to the two world wars – affected a rural community in deepest Devon over a time span of 900 years.

The result is fascinating social history like no other. Bringing to it the brilliant imagination and storytelling gifts that made his Time Traveller’s Guides such a huge success, Mortimer introduces us to lords and merchants, ale brewers and peasants, clergymen and murderers, to create a continuously evolving story. Seeing through its windows, we not only glimpse at the people who lived in the house over the ages; we also see through their eyes as they look out at the changing world around them.

© Ian Mortimer 2026 (P) Penguin Audio 2026

Architecture Europe Great Britain Historical Home Design & Renovation House & Home
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Critic reviews

This intimate portrait of a thousand-year sweep of England’s history that – through the architectural prism of one ordinary house – conjures up the lives of the long dead and offers insights into a seemingly unfathomable past. An intriguing and compelling book (Dan Cruickshank, author of The English House)
This endlessly fascinating book tells the story of England from the inside out, giving full expression to the often neglected ordinary people who lived through the vagaries of royal will, rebellion, prosperity and hardship. A wealth of exquisite period details and vivid descriptions immerse the reader in an extraordinary house and its community over the course of almost 2,000 years. A must for history lovers everywhere (Tracy Borman, author of The House of Boleyn)
To understand England, you do not necessarily need to travel everywhere. Sometimes one very old house is enough. In Through the Windows of an Ordinary House, Ian Mortimer brilliantly tells the story of England through the lens of a single house, his own at Mearsdon Manor, on the edge of Dartmoor in Devon. By tracing the lives of those who lived there, from the 13th-century priest who was pardoned for murder to the woolcomber in the 1600s who carved his initials into its wooden beams, he reveals how great national events such as the Black Death, the English Civil War, and the world wars shaped ordinary lives. Richly researched and engagingly written, this fascinating book reminds us that the history living quietly within the walls of many seemingly unassuming homes is anything but ordinary (Andrew Ziminski, author of Church Going)
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