This article explores aspects of employment on the Durham Priory estates in the years 1494-1519. From a perspective of prices and wages, this period belongs at the tail end of a Golden Age for labour. Employment opportunities for the priory workforce should, therefore, have been relatively plentiful and remuneratively rewarding. However, as an analysis of the priory's accounts reveals, whilst wage rates remained stable, the waged employment offered was irregular and piecemeal for all but a small, predominantly skilled elite, with the majority of the workforce enjoying little in the way of fixed employment patterns or identifiable career structures
Based upon the information recorded in the Minutes Books of the Sunderland Waifs' Rescue Agency and ...
This paper provides new information and data on how work and pay actually operated for skilled and s...
In the late medieval period several English cities claimed the distinction of being a royal chamber:...
This article explores how far estate management and institutional constraints help to explain the tr...
This article explores the nature of agricultural labour in England c.1300. Using a national sample o...
Studies of medieval social mobility have tended to focus upon the success of socially ambitious, gen...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
Throughout the fourteenth century, Edward III issued several letters of protection encouraging Flemi...
The port of Newcastle upon Tyne in north-east England was transformed in the seventeenth century by ...
Drawing on a wide variety of published and unpublished sources, this article reconstructs a crucial ...
The wage data that economic historians rely on for calculating key economic indicators and living st...
Estimates of historical workers' annual incomes suffer from the fundamental problem that they are in...
This dissertation is researching the employment of different types of agricultural labourer in the e...
This article seeks to determine whether changes in factory management during the mid-20th century ca...
This article addresses women's participation and remuneration in the agricultural labour market in c...
Based upon the information recorded in the Minutes Books of the Sunderland Waifs' Rescue Agency and ...
This paper provides new information and data on how work and pay actually operated for skilled and s...
In the late medieval period several English cities claimed the distinction of being a royal chamber:...
This article explores how far estate management and institutional constraints help to explain the tr...
This article explores the nature of agricultural labour in England c.1300. Using a national sample o...
Studies of medieval social mobility have tended to focus upon the success of socially ambitious, gen...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
Throughout the fourteenth century, Edward III issued several letters of protection encouraging Flemi...
The port of Newcastle upon Tyne in north-east England was transformed in the seventeenth century by ...
Drawing on a wide variety of published and unpublished sources, this article reconstructs a crucial ...
The wage data that economic historians rely on for calculating key economic indicators and living st...
Estimates of historical workers' annual incomes suffer from the fundamental problem that they are in...
This dissertation is researching the employment of different types of agricultural labourer in the e...
This article seeks to determine whether changes in factory management during the mid-20th century ca...
This article addresses women's participation and remuneration in the agricultural labour market in c...
Based upon the information recorded in the Minutes Books of the Sunderland Waifs' Rescue Agency and ...
This paper provides new information and data on how work and pay actually operated for skilled and s...
In the late medieval period several English cities claimed the distinction of being a royal chamber:...