The estate system of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, by which the country was divided up among a relatively small number of landowners, has been of special interest to historical geographers. In spite of what Jones Hughes calls these 'elusive territorial entities'' there has traditionally been a fairly stereotyped view of the system in which most aspects of life and landscape were seen to be controlled by the dominant landowning class living in the Big House and owning extensive tracts of land. Latterly, historians and historical geographers have demonstrated by means of numerous case studies of management strategies on individual estates that the estate system was extremely complex in its operation, that its territorial and tenur...
At the beginning of the 20th century, Irish social structure was dominated by a class of small landh...
Studies of landed estates are important for understanding not just the life of the landlords, but a...
Until now works on big houses and landed estates have been published in two separate and specific g...
The estate system of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, by which the country was divided up am...
This thesis explores the internal workings of the Earls Fitzwilliam core estates in Yorkshire and Ir...
The landed estate was a pivotal force in the construction of 'order' within its hinterlands in ninet...
An increasing amount of information is available about the organisation and functioning of Gaelic s...
Some of the better estate maps of 18th-century Ireland – especially those produced by the French sc...
This research is a brief analysis of one of the earliest and most comprehensive estate surveys made ...
This thesis describes, details and maps the evolving patterns of landownership and landholding in, a...
Before the Ordnance Survey undertook the mapping of the country from Malin to Mizzen in the 1830s, ...
The main source for understanding the territorial structure of Gaelic Ireland in the later medieval ...
Estate studies in Irish historical geography have been often designed to confirm or contrast local t...
At the beginning of the 20th century, Irish social structure was dominated by a class of small landh...
Studies of landed estates are important for understanding not just the life of the landlords, but a...
Until now works on big houses and landed estates have been published in two separate and specific g...
The estate system of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, by which the country was divided up am...
This thesis explores the internal workings of the Earls Fitzwilliam core estates in Yorkshire and Ir...
The landed estate was a pivotal force in the construction of 'order' within its hinterlands in ninet...
An increasing amount of information is available about the organisation and functioning of Gaelic s...
Some of the better estate maps of 18th-century Ireland – especially those produced by the French sc...
This research is a brief analysis of one of the earliest and most comprehensive estate surveys made ...
This thesis describes, details and maps the evolving patterns of landownership and landholding in, a...
Before the Ordnance Survey undertook the mapping of the country from Malin to Mizzen in the 1830s, ...
The main source for understanding the territorial structure of Gaelic Ireland in the later medieval ...
Estate studies in Irish historical geography have been often designed to confirm or contrast local t...
At the beginning of the 20th century, Irish social structure was dominated by a class of small landh...
Studies of landed estates are important for understanding not just the life of the landlords, but a...
Until now works on big houses and landed estates have been published in two separate and specific g...