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A History Of Agriculture And Prices In England - Volume 5



This excerpt from a history of agriculture and prices in England discusses how prices fluctuated over the course of the seventeenth century. James E. Thorold Rogers compiled this information from various sources, including college archives and the Public Record Office. He used this data to discuss the costs of traditional agricultural products as well as fuel and building materials, transport, ten... more details
Key Features:
  • Prices fluctuated throughout the seventeenth century, with increases and decreases in different areas of the economy
  • The cost of traditional agricultural products, as well as fuel and building materials, rose during the seventeenth century
  • Transport, tenant farms, and wages all changed during the seventeenth century.


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This excerpt from a history of agriculture and prices in England discusses how prices fluctuated over the course of the seventeenth century. James E. Thorold Rogers compiled this information from various sources, including college archives and the Public Record Office. He used this data to discuss the costs of traditional agricultural products as well as fuel and building materials, transport, tenant farms, and changes in wages.

Since early times, agriculture has been pivotal to England's economy. This is the fifth in a magisterial seven-volume, eight-piece compilation by the economist James E. Thorold Rogers (1823-90), which represents the most complete record of produce costs in England between the thirteenth and eighteenth centuries. Drawing on a variety of sources including college archives and the Public Record Office, Rogers documents the fluctuating prices of commodities such as livestock, wheat, hay, wool, textiles and labour in a time of great economic change, when the growing economy of the early middle ages was shaken by famine and the Black Death, and then gradually recovered towards the Agrarian Revolution. First published in 1887, Volume 5 uses the data supplied in Volume 6 to discuss the period from 1583 to 1702, exploring the costs of traditional agricultural products as well as fuel and building materials, transport, tenant farms, and changes in wages.
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