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Agricultural historians have collected and published a remarkable amount of material in recent years, partly as a result of the ongoing series 'The Agrarian History of England and Wales'. Missing from the Agrarian History volumes covering 1640-1850 has been any sustained analysis of agricultural rent, a perhaps surprising omission in view of the enormous sums of money which passed between landlords and tenants annually, and given the importance of the subject in terms of our understanding of the general course of change in agriculture and the economy more generally. In recent years the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Agricultural historians have collected and published a remarkable amount of material in recent years, partly as a result of the ongoing series 'The Agrarian History of England and Wales'. Missing from the Agrarian History volumes covering 1640-1850 has been any sustained analysis of agricultural rent, a perhaps surprising omission in view of the enormous sums of money which passed between landlords and tenants annually, and given the importance of the subject in terms of our understanding of the general course of change in agriculture and the economy more generally. In recent years the availability of estate accounts in public archive repositories has made available a range of data for the period c.1690 to the First World War, after which the material is voluminous and well known. In this book, based on research in archives across the country, the authors have produced a new rent index which will become the basis on which all future researchers in the field will rely.

Table of contents:
Preface; Introduction; 1. Agricultural rent in England; 2. Contemporary views of rent in eighteenth and nineteenth-century England; 3. The current state of knowledge; 4. The determining parameters of a rent index; 5. Constructing the rent index I: estate records; 6. Constructing the rent index II: government inquiries; 7. Constructing the rent index III: other studies; 8. An English agricultural rent index 1690-1914; 9. Rent arrears and regional variations; 10. The rent index and agricultural history I: the long term; 11. The rent and agricultural history II: the short term; Conclusion; Appendices; Bibliography.

A study of the course of English agricultural rents 1690-1914, drawing on a range of previously unused archival data, and filling a large gap in agricultural history during the period of the so-called 'agricultural revolution'. The book will become the basis on which all future researchers in the field will rely.

A study of the course of English agricultural rents, from 1690 to the First World War.