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Recession and recovery : the economic history of rural society in Durham, c.1400-1640

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TLDR
This article explored how rural society adapted to the fifteenth century recession, and how this affected the ability of their sixteenth-century counterparts to respond to inflation, and concluded that estate management and institutional constraints were often crucial factors in the transformation of the English countryside: these two neighbouring ecclesiastical estates faced broadly the same problems and yet the composition of their estates differed significantly across this period.
Abstract
This thesis explores how rural society adapted to the fifteenth-century recession, and how this affected the ability of their sixteenth-century counterparts to respond to inflation. It does so through three primary sections: the first explores how the Bishops of Durham and the monks of Durham Cathedral Priory responded differently to the fifteenth-century recession and analyses the subsequently divergent development of their estates. By the seventeenth century, all of the Dean and Chapter’s lands were consolidated holdings on 21-year leases, whereas a confused mixture of copyhold and leasehold land had developed on the bishops’ estate. The second section explores the balance of landed power in the Palatinate of Durham from the late-fourteenth to the mid-seventeenth century amongst the laity. This further explores whether the ‘crisis of the aristocracy’ and the ‘rise of the gentry’ are misnomers more adequately phrased in terms of land usage as the ‘rise of agricultural producers’ and the ‘crisis of rentier landlords’. The final section explores how the tenantry of the above estates survived this period, with the gradual stratification of landed society and the emergence of the yeomanry as a social group. It especially focuses upon how the divergent development of the two ecclesiastical estates impacted upon the opportunities and challenges facing the tenants of Durham. The overall conclusion reached by this thesis is that estate management and institutional constraints were often crucial factors in the transformation of the English countryside: these two neighbouring ecclesiastical estates faced broadly the same problems and yet the composition of their estates diverged significantly across this period. Institutional constraints had a profound effect not only on levels of rent, but also the tenure of holdings and ultimately their relative size; three of the most important factors in the formation of agrarian capitalism.

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Before the Industrial Revolution: European Society and Economy, 1000–1700. By Carlo M. Cipolla. New York, W. W. Norton, 1976. Pp. xiv + 326. $12.95.

TL;DR: In this article, Carlo Cipolla draws a "static approximation" of the pre-industrial European economy, focusing on demand, supply, productivity, and production, and discusses forces that produced economic change if not industrial revolution, such as population growth, technological and business innovation, and geographical power shift.
References
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Book

The Economy of Obligation: The Culture of Credit and Social Relations in Early Modern England

Craig Muldrew
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the structure and practice of marketing activity and its expansion in the sixteenth-century growth of the market and the structure of credit networks in King's Lynn.
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The Black death

TL;DR: Part one: Narrative accounts 1. The plague in continental Europe 2. The Plague in the British Isles 3. The religious response 4. Scientific explanations 5. Human agency 6. The impact of the plague 7. Repercussions
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Urban growth and agricultural change: England and the Continent in the early modern period

TL;DR: The authors examined the relationship between economic growth and urban growth in England and the rest of Europe in the early modern period and determined what additional insights into differential economic development in Europe result from a separation of population growth into rural and urban components.