This is the author's post-print version of an article whose final and definitive form has been published in The Economic History Review. © 2003 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. The definitive version is available at: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118509292/homeEarls Colne first came to the notice of historians through Macfarlane's study of its seventeenth-century vicar, Ralph Josselin, and then Macfarlane's use of evidence from the village in his The Origins of English Individualism (1978). This article presents preliminary results drawn from a computer-based reconstruction of the copyhold land market, 1546-1750, to contest Macfarlane's reading of the family-land bond in the manor. The familial possession of land over long periods is ...
In this paper, an attempt will be made to discuss the likely context for pre-plague indications of e...
grantor: University of TorontoThe study examines two historiographical issues: personal we...
This article provides new insights into long-standing debates on lord-tenant relations in medieval E...
Copyright © 1999 Cambridge University PressThe quantitative study of English land markets in the thr...
In this important article Richard Hoyle, one of the country’s leading historians of the early modern...
One of the problems which has intrigued English historians for over a hundred years is that of the p...
The following article introduces the feudal concept of real property or land that still exists in En...
This article explores how far estate management and institutional constraints help to explain the tr...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
This paper re-examines the late medieval market in freehold land, the extent to which it was governe...
Occupations listed in wills reveal that as early as 1560 effectively only 60% of the English engaged...
Gavelkind was the default system of land-holding in Kent from the early middle ages until the reform...
In the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, the rapid growth of population produced both press...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...
In 1921 The Estates Gazette announced that around one quarter of land in England and Wales had ‘chan...
In this paper, an attempt will be made to discuss the likely context for pre-plague indications of e...
grantor: University of TorontoThe study examines two historiographical issues: personal we...
This article provides new insights into long-standing debates on lord-tenant relations in medieval E...
Copyright © 1999 Cambridge University PressThe quantitative study of English land markets in the thr...
In this important article Richard Hoyle, one of the country’s leading historians of the early modern...
One of the problems which has intrigued English historians for over a hundred years is that of the p...
The following article introduces the feudal concept of real property or land that still exists in En...
This article explores how far estate management and institutional constraints help to explain the tr...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
This paper re-examines the late medieval market in freehold land, the extent to which it was governe...
Occupations listed in wills reveal that as early as 1560 effectively only 60% of the English engaged...
Gavelkind was the default system of land-holding in Kent from the early middle ages until the reform...
In the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, the rapid growth of population produced both press...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...
In 1921 The Estates Gazette announced that around one quarter of land in England and Wales had ‘chan...
In this paper, an attempt will be made to discuss the likely context for pre-plague indications of e...
grantor: University of TorontoThe study examines two historiographical issues: personal we...
This article provides new insights into long-standing debates on lord-tenant relations in medieval E...