@inbook{10.3138/9781442679085.7, ISBN = {9780802040961}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.3138/9781442679085.7}, abstract = {The streets, buildings, and physical geography of the town we live in are the most immediate determinants of our networks of relationships with one another and with our collective past. They also constitute the physical context in which public celebration is conducted. That context is not neutral. It is the product of an ongoing process of urban development which has led to the construction of buildings which may serve not only as functional places for habitation, commerce, and assembly, but also as structures symbolic of authority and tradition The streets and open spaces of a medieval town determined processional routes}, author = {DAVID MILLS}, booktitle = {Recycling the Cycle: The City of Chester and Its Whitsun Plays}, pages = {20--38}, publisher = {University of Toronto Press}, title = {Time and Space in Tudor Chester}, year = {1998} }