Rating: 3.5 stars
A better title for this book would have been "A Short History of the British Isles According to Sheep". Coulthard starts off with ancient history - the domestication of wild ovines in the Middle East and the uses that people got from these sheep, such as meat, milk, cheese and wool. The book then progresses, peacemeal, to how sheep products influenced the economy, textile manufacture, laws, trade, wars, food, and the daily life of those living in the British Isles (with a passing mention of other bits of the world). The information provided is mostly new to me and I found it interesting. The development of felt and knitting, the sheer number of sheep required to keep the Celts, Roman and Vikings in cloth, and the properties of wool were particularly interesting. In short, this is a jaunty but interesting, if somewhat casual look at how sheep influenced humanity, with heavy emphasis on the British Isles.