Linda Levy Peck is Columbian Professor of History at the George Washington University. She has published extensively on politics, society, and culture in seventeenth-century England. She is the author of Court Patronage and Corruption in Early Stuart England (1990) and the editor of The Mental World of the Jacobean Court (1991).
1. 'I must have a pair of Damasked spurs': shopping in seventeenth-century
London; 2. 'We may as well be silk-masters as sheep-masters': transferring
technology in seventeenth-century England; 3. 'What do you lack? What isn't
you buy?': creating new wants; 4. 'Anything that is strange': from rarities
to luxury goods; 5. 'Examine but my humors in buildings, gardening, and
private expenses': cultural exchange and the new built environment; 6. 'The
pictures I desire to have ... must be exquisitely done and by the best
masters': luxury and war: 1640-60; 7. 'Rome's artists in this nature can do
no more': a Bernini in Chelsea; 8. 'The largest, best built, and richest
city in the world': The Royal Society, luxury manufactures, and
aristocratic identity; 9. New wants, new wares: luxury consumption,
cultural change, and economic transformation.