Book Description
British agriculture has been brought to its knees by the onslaught of successive crises
Author : Richard North
Publisher : Bloomsbury Academic
Page : 322 pages
File Size : 48,3 MB
Release : 2001
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN :
British agriculture has been brought to its knees by the onslaught of successive crises
Author : Richard Britnell
Publisher : Univ of Hertfordshire Press
Page : 312 pages
File Size : 26,60 MB
Release : 2009-04
Category : History
ISBN : 1907396446
With special emphasis on the period following the Black Death, this new collection of essays explores agriculture and rural society during the late Middle Ages. Combining a broad perspective on agrarian problems--such as depopulation and social conflict--with illustrative material from detailed local and regional research, this compilation demonstrates how these general problems were solved within specific contexts. The contributors supply detailed studies relating to the use of the land, the movement of prices, the distribution of property, the organization of trade, and the cohesion of village society, among other issues. New research on regional development in medieval England and other European countries is also discussed.
Author : Joan Thirsk
Publisher : OUP Oxford
Page : 382 pages
File Size : 24,11 MB
Release : 1997-10-09
Category : History
ISBN : 0191586811
People like to believe in a past golden age of traditional English countryside, before large farms, machinery, and the destruction of hedgerows changed the landscape forever. However, that countryside may have looked both more and less familiar than we imagine. Take todays startling yellow fields of rapeseed, seemingly more suited to the landscape of Van Gogh than Constable. They were, in fact, thoroughly familiar to fieldworkers in seventeenth-century England. At the same time, some features that would have gone unremarked in the past now seem like oddities. In the fifteenth century, rabbit warrens were specially guarded to rear rabbits as a luxury food for rich mens tables; whilst houses had moats not only to defend them but to provide a source of fresh fish. In the 1500s we find Catherine of Aragon introducing the concept of a fresh salad to the court of Henry VIII; and in the 1600s, artichoke gardens became a fashion of the gentry in their hope of producing more male heirs. The common tomato, suspected of being poisonous in 1837, was transformed into a household vegetable by the end of the nineteenth century, thanks to cheaper glass-making methods and the resulting increase in glasshouses. In addition to these images of past lives, Joan Thirsk reveals how the forces which drive our current interest in alternative forms of agriculture a glut of meat and cereal crops, changing dietary habits, the needs of medicine have striking parallels with earlier periods in our history. She warns us that todays decisions should not be made in a historical vacuum: we can find solutions to our current problems in the experience of people in the past.
Author : Joseph Burgess
Publisher :
Page : 252 pages
File Size : 13,38 MB
Release : 1925
Category : Agriculture
ISBN :
Author : Guido Alfani
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 339 pages
File Size : 35,88 MB
Release : 2017-08-31
Category : History
ISBN : 1107179939
The first systematic study of famine in all parts of Europe from the Middle Ages to present. It compares the characteristics, consequences and causes of famine in regional case studies by leading experts to form a comprehensive picture of when and why food security across the continent became a critical issue.
Author : John Prince Sheldon
Publisher :
Page : 224 pages
File Size : 10,54 MB
Release : 1893
Category : Agriculture
ISBN :
Author : John Donaldson
Publisher :
Page : 858 pages
File Size : 41,11 MB
Release : 1860
Category : Agriculture
ISBN :
Author : Bruce M.S. Campbell
Publisher : Taylor & Francis
Page : 332 pages
File Size : 14,14 MB
Release : 2023-05-31
Category : History
ISBN : 1000944433
The later Middle Ages was an overwhelmingly rural world, with probably three out of four households reliant upon farming for a living. Yet conventional accounts of the period rarely do justice to the variety of ways in which the land was managed and worked. The thirteen essays collected in this volume draw upon the abundant documentary evidence of the period to explore that diversity. In the process they engage with the issue of classification - without which effective generalisation is impossible - and offer a series of solutions to that particularly thorny methodological challenge. Only through systematic and objective classification is it possible to differentiate between and map different field systems, husbandry types, and land-use categories. That, in turn, makes it possible to consider and evaluate the relative roles of soils and topography, institutional structures, and commercialised market demand in shaping farm enterprise both during the period of mounting population before the Black Death and the long era of demographic decline that followed it. What emerges is an agrarian world more commercialised, differentiated, and complex than is usually appreciated, whose institutional and agronomic contours shaped the course of agricultural development for centuries to come.
Author : Eric Kerridge
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 433 pages
File Size : 28,35 MB
Release : 2013-11-05
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 113660295X
First Published in 2005. This book argues that the agricultural revolution took place in England in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and not in the eighteenth and nineteenth.
Author : P J Perry
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 240 pages
File Size : 35,41 MB
Release : 2013-11-05
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 1136581189
Profound Changes took place in British Agriculture between 1875 and 1914. After the prosperous years of the mid-nineteenth century came a period of difficulty for landowners and farmers, with falling prices, lower rents and untenanted farms. Previously attributed to bad seasons and increased food imports, this book questions whether the unexpected depression was rather the evolutionary upheaval of a system forced reluctantly into change. Undoubtedly there was a crisis, in these decades farming ceased to be Britain's major industry; no longer able to supply all her own food, the country came to depend increasingly upon imports. Methods changed, cereal production yielding pre-eminence to pastoral farming. In recent years scholars have challenged traditional interpretations of the crisis, seeking a wider range of causes, characteristics and consequences. It has come to be seen as a phenomenon of change as much as of decay. This book brings together different views of the depression, ranging from contemporary evaluations to recent regional and econometric studies which stress its spatial and developmental character. Originally published in 1973, these eight contributions provide a survey of changing approaches to one of the major economic crises in modern history.