We estimate a model of wheat yields for eighteenth century England using village-level data. This is an entirely new approach to quantifying progress during the Agricultural Revolution and enables us to consider both environmental and technological inputs. We find that climate was a crucial factor but soil quality was much less important, thus throwing doubt on traditional explanations for England’s high productivity. Traditional technologies such as drainage were effective in raising yields, but the technological innovations of the eighteenth century were much more effective. We find that turnips and seed drills were by far the most important innovations, contrary to the received wisdom
Constructing an agricultural output series requires a rational economic basis on which to convert on...
Building on Allen’s Nytrogen Hypothesis, this paper assesses the role of climate change in the Engli...
Between 1700 and 1850, English grain yields were substantially higher than those attained in other c...
This article presents the first agricultural production function for the eighteenth century, thereby...
This article presents the first agricultural production function for the eighteenth century, thereby...
The Industrial Revolution in England was characterised by early and rapid labour release from agricu...
Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.9143(19) / BLDSC - British Library Do...
Historians have long believed that the modern world commenced in Britain in the 1770s with simultane...
The timing of the English agricultural evolution is investigated using three indicators: output grow...
This article presents a method for estimating an annual series of English wheat production in physic...
A biological model of nitrogen in agriculture is specified for early modern England and used to anal...
he English Agricultural Revolution began during a period of climate change in which temperatures dec...
Abstract : Production and Productivity in English Agriculture, 1086-1871. This paper considers alter...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Routledge via the DOI in...
From an extensive dataset of wheat yields at municipal level in mid eighteenth-century Spain, a deta...
Constructing an agricultural output series requires a rational economic basis on which to convert on...
Building on Allen’s Nytrogen Hypothesis, this paper assesses the role of climate change in the Engli...
Between 1700 and 1850, English grain yields were substantially higher than those attained in other c...
This article presents the first agricultural production function for the eighteenth century, thereby...
This article presents the first agricultural production function for the eighteenth century, thereby...
The Industrial Revolution in England was characterised by early and rapid labour release from agricu...
Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.9143(19) / BLDSC - British Library Do...
Historians have long believed that the modern world commenced in Britain in the 1770s with simultane...
The timing of the English agricultural evolution is investigated using three indicators: output grow...
This article presents a method for estimating an annual series of English wheat production in physic...
A biological model of nitrogen in agriculture is specified for early modern England and used to anal...
he English Agricultural Revolution began during a period of climate change in which temperatures dec...
Abstract : Production and Productivity in English Agriculture, 1086-1871. This paper considers alter...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Routledge via the DOI in...
From an extensive dataset of wheat yields at municipal level in mid eighteenth-century Spain, a deta...
Constructing an agricultural output series requires a rational economic basis on which to convert on...
Building on Allen’s Nytrogen Hypothesis, this paper assesses the role of climate change in the Engli...
Between 1700 and 1850, English grain yields were substantially higher than those attained in other c...