English Land and English Landlords: An Enquiry Into the Origin and Character of the English Land System, with Proposals for Its Reform. With an Index, Tema 24215Cobden Club, 1881 - 515 páginas |
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... influence of social and agricul- tural relations in the past , the present , and the future . It has been my endeavour to bring the broader and ( 6 19083 • ( " more characteristic aspects of the English Land System within the.
... influence of social and agricul- tural relations in the past , the present , and the future . It has been my endeavour to bring the broader and ( 6 19083 • ( " more characteristic aspects of the English Land System within the.
Página 10
... social posi- tion was that of yeomen rather than of villeins . At the same time , their legal status was materially strengthened by a new writ , introduced in the reign of Henry III . , whereby a farmer holding under an ordinary lease ...
... social posi- tion was that of yeomen rather than of villeins . At the same time , their legal status was materially strengthened by a new writ , introduced in the reign of Henry III . , whereby a farmer holding under an ordinary lease ...
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... social evils of the fifteenth century . While the great barons were fortifying their old ramparts 1 Speaking of this century , Professor Thorold Rogers says : - " Crops were plentiful , prices were low , labour was relatively well paid ...
... social evils of the fifteenth century . While the great barons were fortifying their old ramparts 1 Speaking of this century , Professor Thorold Rogers says : - " Crops were plentiful , prices were low , labour was relatively well paid ...
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... social equality such as has never since been witnessed , and a rural economy resembling that of modern Switzerland or Germany far more closely than that of modern England . The necessaries of life were cheap and plentiful , the habits ...
... social equality such as has never since been witnessed , and a rural economy resembling that of modern Switzerland or Germany far more closely than that of modern England . The necessaries of life were cheap and plentiful , the habits ...
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... social pro- gress , helped to undermine the ancient status of the English peasant , and paved the way for the new order of things recognised , if not established , by the Poor Law of Elizabeth . But the gradual divorce of the English ...
... social pro- gress , helped to undermine the ancient status of the English peasant , and paved the way for the new order of things recognised , if not established , by the Poor Law of Elizabeth . But the gradual divorce of the English ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acreage acres Adam Smith agricultural labourers allotments amount Arthur Young average barley bushels capital cattle cent century charge common corn Corn Laws cost Cottagers crops cultivated custom Cwts districts Domesday Book duty eldest Enclosure England and Wales English Land System entails equal estimated farm farmers favour fee simple feudal freeholders Greater Yeomen Henry VIII holdings houses improvements income increase interest intestacy labourers landed property landlords landowners leases less Lesser Yeomen limited owner limited ownership Lord Lord Cairns manure meat ment mortgages nearly parish peasant Peers period personalty persons Poor Law population possession price of wheat Primogeniture produce profit proportion Public Bodies purchase quarter rates Real Property realised rent rental rural shillings Small Proprietors soil Squires statute taxation tenant-farmers tenant-in-tail tenant-right tenants tenure tion towns United Kingdom village villeins Vols wages Waste wheat whole younger children
Pasajes populares
Página 45 - Add to this the untimely and • expensive honour of knighthood, to make his poverty more completely splendid. • And when, by these deductions, his fortune was so shattered and ruined that perhaps he was obliged to sell his patrimony, he had not even that poor privilege allowed him, without paying an exorbitant fine for a license of alienation.
Página 40 - Art, at the end of the sixteenth and the beginning of the seventeenth centuries...
Página 68 - Act in respect of the same property, or not ; but no such powers shall be exercised if an express declaration or manifest intention that they shall not be exercised is contained in the settlement, or may reasonably be inferred therefrom, or from extrinsic circumstances or evidence...
Página 26 - Inclosures at that time began to be more frequent, whereby arable land, which could not be manured without people and families, was turned into pasture, which was easily rid by a few herdsmen ; and tenances for years, lives, and at will, whereupon much of the yeomanry lived, were turned into demesnes.
Página 45 - The heir on the death of his ancestor, if of full age, was plundered of the first emoluments arising from his inheritance, by way of relief and primer seisin; and if under age, of the whole of his estate during infancy. And then, as Sir Thomas Smith...
Página 107 - The English law of intestacy is regarded by the Commissioners with equal approbation, since it " appears far better adapted to the constitution and habits of this kingdom than the opposite law of equal partibility, which, in a few generations, would break down the aristocracy of the country, and, by the endless subdivision of the soil, must ultimately be unfavourable to agriculture, and injurious to the best interests of the State.
Página 66 - In families where the estates are kept up from one generation to another, settlements are made every few years for this purpose ; thus in the event of a marriage, a life estate merely is given to the husband ; the wife has an allowance for...
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