<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>This project addresses two key questions in population history: how were cities transformed from demographic sinks into self-sustaining populations; and when and why did class differences in mortality emerge? The project uses a novel source of evidence, the baptism fee books of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, to generate improved estimates of infant mortality in London c.1750-1825, and the first estimates of infant mortality rates by social status for this period. The dataset will reveal whether class differences emerged over the period 1750-1825, and the extent to which this coincided with a decline in smallpox mortality, or with the development of other differences, for instance changes in breastf...
Background This study examines the claim that social inequality in health in European populations w...
This research examines morbidity and mortality in three burial samples from the greater London area ...
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether periodic variations in annual infant mortality were associated with ma...
Romola Davenport presents new evidence regarding both mortality decline and class differences in inf...
ObjectiveThis study tests the argument that industrialisation was accompanied by a dramatic worsenin...
Anecdotal evidence indicates that high-status women in England generally did not breastfeed their ch...
Historical relationships between socioeconomic status and mortality remain poorly understood. This i...
Summary. London experienced a city-wide rise in infant mortality in the second half of the seven-tee...
Background: This study examines the claim that social inequality in health in European populations w...
Background: This study examines the claim that social inequality in health in European populations w...
The Industrial Revolution in the 18th and 19th centuries is one of the most prolific societal change...
In the long-running debate over standards of living during the industrial revolution, pessimists hav...
This article presents a substantive analysis using the Great Britain Historical Geographical Informa...
In the long-running debate over standards of living during the Industrial Revolution, pessimists hav...
This paper considers the changing spatial pattern of infant mortality in England and Wales over the ...
Background This study examines the claim that social inequality in health in European populations w...
This research examines morbidity and mortality in three burial samples from the greater London area ...
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether periodic variations in annual infant mortality were associated with ma...
Romola Davenport presents new evidence regarding both mortality decline and class differences in inf...
ObjectiveThis study tests the argument that industrialisation was accompanied by a dramatic worsenin...
Anecdotal evidence indicates that high-status women in England generally did not breastfeed their ch...
Historical relationships between socioeconomic status and mortality remain poorly understood. This i...
Summary. London experienced a city-wide rise in infant mortality in the second half of the seven-tee...
Background: This study examines the claim that social inequality in health in European populations w...
Background: This study examines the claim that social inequality in health in European populations w...
The Industrial Revolution in the 18th and 19th centuries is one of the most prolific societal change...
In the long-running debate over standards of living during the industrial revolution, pessimists hav...
This article presents a substantive analysis using the Great Britain Historical Geographical Informa...
In the long-running debate over standards of living during the Industrial Revolution, pessimists hav...
This paper considers the changing spatial pattern of infant mortality in England and Wales over the ...
Background This study examines the claim that social inequality in health in European populations w...
This research examines morbidity and mortality in three burial samples from the greater London area ...
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether periodic variations in annual infant mortality were associated with ma...