'Urban Europe, 1100-1700 is a wide-ranging study of urban life and development in medieval and early modern Europe. It is well written, coherent and comprehensive, and undoubtedly benefits from David Nicholas' vast bank of knowledge concerning the urban environment of the medieval and early modern world.' - Penny Galloway, Bristol University 'In little more than two hundred clearly-written and well-organized pages (exclusive of index and bibliography), Nicholas has thus distilled decades of comparative research into a comprehensive narrative that functions both as a scholarly introduction to problems and methods, and a textbook suitable for students of history.' - Carol Symes, The Medieval Review '...compact, yet very comprehensive survey of the European city of pre-industrial Europe, which will be a welcome tool for teachers in urban history as well as a good introduction to anyone who wants to become familiar with the discipline.' - Michael Limberger, H-Net 'David Nicholas has already amply demonstrated his broad and impressive knowledge of medieval Europe's towns. In his latest book he takes a longer timescale, consciously rejecting the traditional division between medieval and early modern and indeed emphasizing a conviction that the whole period experienced an essential continuity of urban forms and structures that came to an end only with the Industrial revolution.' - Journal of Urban History - 2004 'In Urban Europe, Nicholas sketches the outlines of 'the most profound man-made alteration of the landscape in the history of Europe'... Naturally, parts of the canvas remain blank. All told, for a survey that ranges from Transylvania to Catalonia, and from eleventh-century comuni to Amsterdam's golden age, the level of detail is excellent.' - The Historian