This article uses Anna Eliza Grenville, first duchess of Buckingham and Chandos, as a lens through which to explore the gendering of aristocratic property- and slave-ownership in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Britain. Alongside the extensive metropolitan property that Grenville brought to her marriage was Hope estate, a Jamaican plantation upon which worked 379 enslaved men, women, and children. Using legal records, family papers, and correspondence, the article examines the ways in which Grenville negotiated her position as a married woman and substantial property-owner, and considers what it meant for a married woman to 'own' property, landed and in the form of other human beings, in the late eighteenth- and early nineteen...
This article is about the wealth and material culture of the Jamaican elite during the age of abolit...
This article explores relations between free people of colour and white men in early nineteenth-cent...
This chapter explores the relations between women, land, property and the law. The first part of th...
The papers in this special issue make an important contribution to a growing body of work, exploring...
This article explores how women in England, using a range of economic and legal tools and methods, m...
By placing a particular focus on non-portable property – land, the house and the estate – this speci...
This paper explores the place of domestic slaves in British families resident in India, c. 1780–1830...
In the eighteenth century, the condition of English wives under ‘coverture’ was both defended as one...
Thesis Abstract The inequality of sexes in England has been a sore point in society for centuries. S...
This article presents the case history of Lady Anne Clifford, a seventeenth century Englishwoman who...
Historians richly document white women’s social, ideological, and cultural roles within nineteenth-c...
This dissertation examines women's autobiographical texts as key sites for understanding the variety...
This article addresses the boundaries of female power within early modern aristocratic families. It ...
This dissertation conceives of Jamaica, the wealthiest and largest slave-holding colony in the Atlan...
The effect of the law and practice relating to the ownership by and transmission of property by and ...
This article is about the wealth and material culture of the Jamaican elite during the age of abolit...
This article explores relations between free people of colour and white men in early nineteenth-cent...
This chapter explores the relations between women, land, property and the law. The first part of th...
The papers in this special issue make an important contribution to a growing body of work, exploring...
This article explores how women in England, using a range of economic and legal tools and methods, m...
By placing a particular focus on non-portable property – land, the house and the estate – this speci...
This paper explores the place of domestic slaves in British families resident in India, c. 1780–1830...
In the eighteenth century, the condition of English wives under ‘coverture’ was both defended as one...
Thesis Abstract The inequality of sexes in England has been a sore point in society for centuries. S...
This article presents the case history of Lady Anne Clifford, a seventeenth century Englishwoman who...
Historians richly document white women’s social, ideological, and cultural roles within nineteenth-c...
This dissertation examines women's autobiographical texts as key sites for understanding the variety...
This article addresses the boundaries of female power within early modern aristocratic families. It ...
This dissertation conceives of Jamaica, the wealthiest and largest slave-holding colony in the Atlan...
The effect of the law and practice relating to the ownership by and transmission of property by and ...
This article is about the wealth and material culture of the Jamaican elite during the age of abolit...
This article explores relations between free people of colour and white men in early nineteenth-cent...
This chapter explores the relations between women, land, property and the law. The first part of th...