This article offers a brief survey of scholarship dealing with domestic service in England at the latter end of early modernity. Neglected by British social historians of the ‘productive’ and industrial working classes, servants did not receive much serious attention until the demographers of the 1970s showed that most early modern youths from all backgrounds passed some years in service. The notion of ‘life-cycle service’ has proved controversial but fruitful for the study of the history of the family and of youth, and of the wide variety of functions carried out by servants in pre-industrial households. In the 1980s feminism and the revival of domestic service in middle-class homes led to a surge of interest in modern and Victorian serva...