The Isle of Axholme, 1540-1640: economy and society

In the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, the rapid growth of population produced both pressure on land and an increase in the demand for com, the supply of which was inelastic, resulting in inflation of food prices compared with manufactured commodities. The consensus of many writers is tha...

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Main Author: Fleet, Peter F.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13621/
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author Fleet, Peter F.
author_facet Fleet, Peter F.
author_sort Fleet, Peter F.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description In the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, the rapid growth of population produced both pressure on land and an increase in the demand for com, the supply of which was inelastic, resulting in inflation of food prices compared with manufactured commodities. The consensus of many writers is that the rich grew richer while the poor grew poorer because the larger farmers who could market surpluses of food, and also increase their landholding, benefited at the expense of the smaller farmer, who produced only sufficient for subsistence. Economic change produced social change. Almost fifty years ago, Thirsk maintained that drainage schemes in the 1620s in the Isle of Axholme changed its agricultural economy from pastoral to arable. This thesis will add to her work by demonstrating that economic and social structures were the result of interactions between a number of elements within the Isle's communities of which inheritance practices were a major factor. Partible inheritance, by which landholdings could be divided successively to the point of being no longer able to support a family, had a number of effects: the availability of small plots of land, creating an active land-market, especially for the entrepreneurial farmer; emigration by those unable to make a living from any land they had held, which became available for others; immigration for the purpose of renting or buying these small parcels of land; the growth of debt (credit); and the development of secondary occupations. The economic and social structures of a community were consequently altered, particularly in favour of those who could offer security for their borrowings, and there was a widening divide between the richest and poorest members of society.
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spelling nottingham-136212025-02-28T11:26:11Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13621/ The Isle of Axholme, 1540-1640: economy and society Fleet, Peter F. In the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, the rapid growth of population produced both pressure on land and an increase in the demand for com, the supply of which was inelastic, resulting in inflation of food prices compared with manufactured commodities. The consensus of many writers is that the rich grew richer while the poor grew poorer because the larger farmers who could market surpluses of food, and also increase their landholding, benefited at the expense of the smaller farmer, who produced only sufficient for subsistence. Economic change produced social change. Almost fifty years ago, Thirsk maintained that drainage schemes in the 1620s in the Isle of Axholme changed its agricultural economy from pastoral to arable. This thesis will add to her work by demonstrating that economic and social structures were the result of interactions between a number of elements within the Isle's communities of which inheritance practices were a major factor. Partible inheritance, by which landholdings could be divided successively to the point of being no longer able to support a family, had a number of effects: the availability of small plots of land, creating an active land-market, especially for the entrepreneurial farmer; emigration by those unable to make a living from any land they had held, which became available for others; immigration for the purpose of renting or buying these small parcels of land; the growth of debt (credit); and the development of secondary occupations. The economic and social structures of a community were consequently altered, particularly in favour of those who could offer security for their borrowings, and there was a widening divide between the richest and poorest members of society. 2002 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13621/1/270292.pdf Fleet, Peter F. (2002) The Isle of Axholme, 1540-1640: economy and society. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Isle of Axholme history art
spellingShingle Isle of Axholme
history
art
Fleet, Peter F.
The Isle of Axholme, 1540-1640: economy and society
title The Isle of Axholme, 1540-1640: economy and society
title_full The Isle of Axholme, 1540-1640: economy and society
title_fullStr The Isle of Axholme, 1540-1640: economy and society
title_full_unstemmed The Isle of Axholme, 1540-1640: economy and society
title_short The Isle of Axholme, 1540-1640: economy and society
title_sort isle of axholme, 1540-1640: economy and society
topic Isle of Axholme
history
art
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13621/