English Farming, Past and PresentLongmans, Green, 1912 - 504 pagina's |
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Pagina 7
... allowed it to be cut up into strips and intermixed with other holdings , the demesne was mainly cultivated by the labour services of the unfree peasantry . The rest of the land of the manor , forming the larger portion of the cultivated ...
... allowed it to be cut up into strips and intermixed with other holdings , the demesne was mainly cultivated by the labour services of the unfree peasantry . The rest of the land of the manor , forming the larger portion of the cultivated ...
Pagina 12
... allowed to tenants when performing many of their services . Though the manual and team work of the tenants provided most of the labour of the farm , the lord also employed a large permanent staff of agricultural servants , most of whom ...
... allowed to tenants when performing many of their services . Though the manual and team work of the tenants provided most of the labour of the farm , the lord also employed a large permanent staff of agricultural servants , most of whom ...
Pagina 13
... allowed them to do so , they pulled less steadily , and sudden strains severely tested the primitive plough - gear . On hard ground they did less work , and only when the land was stony had they any advantage , Economical reasons ...
... allowed them to do so , they pulled less steadily , and sudden strains severely tested the primitive plough - gear . On hard ground they did less work , and only when the land was stony had they any advantage , Economical reasons ...
Pagina 15
... allowed to go on the ground , till the sun had purified the land from the " gelly or matty rime , " which was supposed to engender scab . So also they were driven from the damp , low - lying grounds lest they should eat the white water ...
... allowed to go on the ground , till the sun had purified the land from the " gelly or matty rime , " which was supposed to engender scab . So also they were driven from the damp , low - lying grounds lest they should eat the white water ...
Pagina 37
... allowed portions of his demesne to be intermixed with the strips of his tenants , he could withdraw those portions at will , even though their withdrawal diminished the com- monable area of cultivated land . With this exception , land ...
... allowed portions of his demesne to be intermixed with the strips of his tenants , he could withdraw those portions at will , even though their withdrawal diminished the com- monable area of cultivated land . With this exception , land ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acres Act of Parliament agri agricultural agricultural labourers agriculturists allowed arable land Arthur Young average barley Board of Agriculture bread breed Cambridgeshire cattle clover common fields copyholders Corn Laws cottages crops cultivation demesne districts drainage duty eighteenth century employment enclosed Enclosure Acts enclosures England English farming Essex estates exports farmers fens Fitzherbert foreign freeholders grain grass harvest Hertfordshire holdings horses Husbandry important improved increased industry labour landlords landowners legislation Leicestershire Lincolnshire live-stock living lord manor manufacturing manure ment neighbours Norfolk oats occupiers open-field farms open-field system owners Oxfordshire parish Parliament pasture payment period plough Poor Law population practice produce profits progress quarter rates reign rents roads rural says scarcity seasons sheep soil Suffolk supply tenants tillage tion tithes trade turnips turnpike trusts Tusser village farms wages Wales wastes wheat winter wool writers
Populaire passages
Pagina 203 - They will here meet with rutts which I actually measured four feet deep, and floating with mud only from a wet summer...
Pagina 352 - Soon shall thy arm, unconquered steam, afar Drag the slow barge or drive the rapid car ; Or, on wide-waving wings expanded, bear The flying chariot through the fields of air...
Pagina 60 - ... for years, lives, and at will, whereupon much of the yeomanry lived, were turned into demesnes. This bred a decay of people, and, by consequence, a decay of towns, churches, tithes, and the like.
Pagina 434 - ... a convenient stock of flax hemp wool thread iron and other necessary ware and stuff to set the poor on work: and also competent sums of money for and towards the necessary relief of the lame impotent old blind and such other among them being poor and not able to work...
Pagina 436 - ... to be inconvenient and oppressive, inasmuch as it often prevents an industrious poor person from receiving such occasional relief as is best suited to the peculiar case of such poor person, and inasmuch as in certain cases it holds out conditions of relief injurious to the comfort and domestic situation and happiness of such poor persons.
Pagina 203 - A more dreadful road cannot be imagined. I was obliged to hire two men at one place to support my chaise from overturning. Let me persuade all travellers to avoid this terrible country, which must either dislocate their bones with broken pavements, or bury them in muddy sand.
Pagina 426 - The Reformed Husband-Man; or a brief Treatise of the Errors, Defects, and Inconveniences of our English Husbandry, in ploughing and sowing for corn...
Pagina 235 - Nor is it in the view of productiveness alone, that such an enclosure is to be wished: the morals of the whole surrounding country demand it imperiously. The vicinity is filled with poachers, deer-stealers, thieves, and pilferers of every kind : offences of almost every description abound so much, that the offenders are a terror to all quiet and welldisposed persons; and Oxford gaol would be uninhabited, were it not for this fertile source of crimes.
Pagina 447 - Pease or Beans. If the produce of and imported from any British Possession out of Europe; Wheat, Barley...
Pagina 118 - Come, Brethren of the water, and let us all assemble, To treat upon this Matter, which makes us quake and tremble ; For we shall rue...