A ledger of power, piety and daily life in medieval Canterbury. The Register of St. Augustine's Abbey - commonly called the Black Book - is a historical manuscript collection that forms part of the Benedictine abbey archives and preserves the administrative heart of an influential monastery. A window into medieval life. This primary source anthology brings together English abbey registers and medieval ecclesiastical records in a readable modern rendering, offering monastic register translation alongside faithful transcriptions that make medieval Canterbury documents intelligible beyond specialist circles. Editors supply introductions and annotations that map people, places and peculiar phrases, helping readers follow entries that record property, obligations and the day-to-day governance of a medieval house. The result is both a working tool for research and an evocative archive of the routines that shaped English church history. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Beyond its archival value, the Black Book offers an unmediated encounter with documentary practice; its contents speak directly to studies of 13th century England and medieval Kent history and to the broader scholarship on ecclesiastical institutions. As an academic research resource it supports citation, comparison and teaching; as a genealogy reference book it can reveal family names, tenures and local ties often absent elsewhere. Casual readers and classic-literature collectors will both find it rewarding: a tangible connection to medieval Canterbury documents and a cultural treasure that belongs as comfortably on a scholar's desk as on a private shelf. It illuminates the routines of monastic life and the paperwork that underpinned medieval institutional authority, and it proves invaluable to specialists in paleography and diplomatics. Presented with clarity and care, the edition invites repeated consultation, classroom use and the quieter pleasures of solitary reading.