Synopses & Reviews
Changes in economic activities across 542 parishes from the beginning of national marriage registration in 1538.
Review
'The subtlety and ingenuity of Kussmaul's book ... will repay detailed study.' Southern History
Review
'All in all the book providess a fascinating insight to long-term changes in the English countryside prior to the mid-nineteenth century.' Local Population Studies
Review
'We can be sure this book will prompt much lively argument for a long time to come.' The Times Higher Education Supplement
Review
'Kussmaul makes a genuinely original and important contribution to the economic history of early modern England.' The Times Literary Supplement
Synopsis
In rural England prior to the Industrial Revolution people generally married when they were not busy with work. Parish registers of marriage therefore form an important and innovative source for the study of economic change in this period. Dr Kussmaul employs marriage dates to identify three main patterns of work and risk (arable, pastoral and rural industrial) and more importantly to show the long-term changes in economic activities across 542 English parishes from the beginning of national marriage registration in 1538. No single historical landscape emerges. Instead A General View of the Rural Economy of England, 1538-1840 maps the changes in economic orientation from arable through regional specialization to rural industrialization and explores how these changes had implications for the extent of population growth in the early modern period. Dr Kussmaul's study presents a view of early modern English economic history from a unique standpoint.
Synopsis
This book maps the changes in economic orientation from arable through regional specialization to rural industrialization and explores how these changes had implications for the extent of population growth in the early modern period. Dr Kussmaul's study presents a view of early modern English economic history from a unique standpoint.
Table of Contents
List of figures; List of tables; Preface; 1. A bird's eye view of the past; 2. 'When shall we marry?'; 3. Source and method; 4. Agrarian change: the evidence; 5. Regional specialization, causes and consequences; 6. Rural manufacturing, location and labour; 7. Change, consolidation, and population; 8. What the view saw; Appendix; Bibliography; Index.