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  • - The Urban Foundations of Western Society
    av Katherine A. Lynch
    547 - 1 044,-

    In this book, Katherine Lynch discusses the place of the family in society from the late middle ages to the industrial period. She explores the family's function as an organization on the boundary between public and private life, and how this has been shaped by political, religious and demographic factors.

  • - Cuenca, 1540-1870
    av David Reher
    547,-

    This 1990 study of a hilltop town on the Castilian Meseta analyses its socio-economic structures in the context of the urbanisation of rural Spain, and shows how the history of the town is paradigmatic of the social, economic and demographic changes in urban areas of the Mediterranean basin.

  • av R. S. (University of Cambridge) Schofield, R. S. (University of Cambridge) Davies, J. E. (University of Cambridge) Oeppen & m.fl.
    1 320 - 1 882,-

    Using data from 26 Anglican parish registers between the sixteenth and mid-nineteenth century, this book demonstrates the value of the technique of family reconstitution as a means of obtaining accurate and detailed information about fertility, morality, and nuptiality in the past.

  • - Wealden Society in the Sixteenth Century
    av Michael (University of Greenwich) Zell
    515 - 1 654,-

    Industry in the Countryside explores the nature of manufacturing before the Industrial Revolution. It is a wide ranging study of the Kentish Weald - a region where woollen textiles were produced by outworkers in their own cottages, on behalf of capitalist entrepreneurs. Zell asks the question, is there anything in the 'proto- industrialisation' model?

  • av Boulder) McIntosh & Marjorie Keniston (University of Colorado
    682 - 1 488,-

    Through an examination of 255 places in England, Professor McIntosh challenges many historical assumptions to demonstrate that concern with wrongdoing mounted gradually between 1370 and 1600. This important study describes how English people defined and attempted to control misbehaviour during the later medieval and early modern periods.

  • - Structures of Life in Sixteenth-Century London
    av Steve (New York University) Rappaport
    697,-

    Worlds Within Worlds combines sophisticated quantitative analysis with vivid empirical detail, and mounts a major challenge to much current thinking about urban life in early modern Britain.

  • - The Household as a Process in an Industrializing Community
    av The Netherlands) Janssens & Angelique (Universiteit Utrecht
    591 - 1 669,-

    This book examines the effects of nineteenth-century industrialisation on family life, based on the Dutch experience. Dr Janssens uses a quantitative approach and her subsequent critical analysis confidently revises traditionally dominant theories.

  • - Labourers and Building Craftsmen in the Towns of Northern England, 1450-1750
    av Donald (University of Hull) Woodward
    560 - 1 423,-

    This study redresses the North and South imbalance of much work in economic and social history by focusing on the impact of the building trade. The period 1450-1750 witnessed substantial changes in agriculture, industry, and population. Using local archives, the author addresses conditions of work, wages, gender differences, and relationships with employers.

  • av Richard P. (University of Chicago) Saller
    515 - 1 168,-

    This innovative study of the patriarchy belies the accepted notion of the father figure as tyrannical and exploitative.

  • av Ann Kussmaul
    591,-

    This book maps the changes in economic orientation from arable through regional specialization to rural industrialization and explores how these changes had implications for the extent of population growth in the early modern period. Dr Kussmaul's study presents a view of early modern English economic history from a unique standpoint.

  • - Essex 1350-1525
    av L. R. (Catholic University of America Poos
    545,-

    This is a study of rural social structure in the county of Essex between 1350 and 1500.

  • - Studies in the Demographic History of London, 1670-1830
    av John Landers
    474 - 1 708,-

    A powerful analysis of demographic patterns in London over the 'long eighteenth century', concentrating on mortality but also including data on marital fertility, population structure and migration. The evidence indicates that mortality in London was generally much higher than in other settlements in England.

  • av Simon (University of Cambridge) Szreter
    1 016 - 1 958,-

    This book examines the dramatic fall in family size in Britain between 1860 and 1940. It overturns current thinking and presents new and surprising findings about the importance of sexual abstinence and widely spaced births.

  •  
    682,-

    This collection of essays on land transfer presents detailed case studies from English rural communities over the period 1250-1850. The focus is on the strata of English society below the landed aristocracy and the urban merchant elites.

  •  
    758,-

    Although Western societies cannot escape from images of famine in the present world, their direct experience of widespread hunger has receded into the past. England was one of the very first countries to escape from the shadow of famine; in this volume a team of distinguished economic, social and demographic historians analyses why.

  • av Mary J. (University of Oxford) Dobson
    940 - 2 049,-

    This 1997 book provides a geographical, demographic and epidemiological study of disease and mortality in early modern England. Using a wide range of sources, the author examines the dramatic variations in death rates and disease patterns across the English countryside, and in so doing gives the first detailed account of the history of malaria in England.

  • - Illiteracy and Society in Scotland and Northern England, 1600-1800
    av R. A. Houston
    606,-

    A campaign promoted by church and state between 1560 and 1696 is said to have produced in Scotland the most literate population in the early modern world. This book sets out to test this belief by comparing the ability to read and write in Scotland with northern England in particular and with Europe and North America in general.

  • - Europe, America, and the Third World
    av Robert William (University of Chicago) Fogel
    364 - 986,-

    A compelling study from Nobel laureate Robert Fogel, first published in 2004, which examines health, nutrition and technology over the last three centuries and beyond. It will be essential reading for all those interested in economics, demography, history and health care policy.

  • - Entrepreneurs, Labour Force and Living Conditions, 1700-1850
    av L. D. Schwarz
    586 - 1 563,-

    Prior to the mid nineteenth century London experienced mainly indirect effects of the industrial revolution but it was, nonetheless, susceptible to many of the wider economic transformations that occured during the period 1700-1850. This book provides a detailed analysis of the changes to the economy and social structure of London during this time.

  • - Nutritional Status in the United Kingdom, 1750-1980
    av Kenneth Wachter, Roderick (Provost) Floud & Annabel (Dr) Gregory
    474 - 1 882,-

    In historical accounts of the circumstances of ordinary people's lives, nutrition has been the great unknown. Nearly impossible to measure or assess directly, it has nonetheless been held responsible for the declining mortality rates of the nineteenth century as well as being a major factor in the gap in living standards, morbidity and mortality between rich and poor.

  • - Environment, Population and Social Structure in the Alps since the Sixteenth Century
    av Pier Paolo Viazzo
    667 - 1 730,-

    This book follows the social, economic and demographic transformations of the Alpine area from the late Middle Ages. Its aim is to reassess the image of the upland community which emerges from the work of historians, geographers and social anthropologists.

  • - Place, Class and Demography, 1891-1911
    av Eilidh Garrett, Alice Reid, Kevin Schurer & m.fl.
    651 - 1 697,-

    This volume is an important study in demographic history. It draws on the individual returns from the 1891, 1901 and 1911 censuses of England and Wales, to which Garrett, Reid, Schurer and Szreter were permitted access ahead of scheduled release dates. Using the responses of the inhabitants of thirteen communities to the special questions included in the 1911 'fertility' census, they consider the interactions between the social, economic and physical environments in which people lived and their family-building experience and behaviour. Techniques and approaches based in demography, history and geography enable the authors to re-examine the declines in infant mortality and marital fertility which occurred at the turn of the twentieth century. Comparisons are drawn within and between white-collar, agricultural and industrial communities, and the analyses, conducted at both local and national level, lead to conclusions which challenge both contemporary and current orthodoxies.

  • - Demography, Society and Culture in Rural England, 1800-1930
    av Barry Reay
    773 - 1 554,-

    This 1996 book uses a local study to explore some of the more significant societal changes of the modern western world. Drawing on a range of research techniques, it examines topics such as marriage, fertility, health, the work of women and children, illegitimacy and sexuality, and in so doing presents an exciting example of the 'new rural history'.

  • av Bruce W. Frier, New York) Bagnall & Roger S. (Columbia University
    849,-

    This book reconstructs the demographic regime in Roman Egypt during the first three centuries AD, using as its main evidence the three hundred surviving census returns filed by ordinary declarants. The authors use modern demographic methods and models to reconstruct the patterns of mortality, marriage, fertility and migration that are likely to have prevailed in Roman Egypt.

  • - British and Irish Quakers in the Demographic Transition
    av Richard T. Vann & David Eversley
    530,-

    In this book, two distinguished historians join forces to exploit the exceptional riches offered by the British and Irish Quakers for the student of social, demographic, and familial change during the period 1650-1900. The authors have analysed the experiences of more than 8,000 Quaker families, involving over 30,000 individuals.

  • - The Economy and Demography of Stockholm, 1750-1850
    av Johan Söderberg, Ulf Jonsson & Christer Persson
    459,-

    This book analyses a peculiar phase in the history of Stockholm which has not previously been systematically investigated. Between 1750 and 1850 the Swedish capital experienced long-term stagnation, characterized by de-industrialization and slow population growth.

  • - Marriage, Family and Fertility, 1880-1940
    av Alan Duben & Cem Behar
    621,-

    Istanbul Households is a social history of marriage, the family and population in Istanbul during the turbulent period of transition from the Ottoman Empire to the Turkish Republic in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It combines the methods and approaches of social anthropology, historical demography and social history.

  • - The Manor and Liberty of Havering-atte-Bower 1500-1620
    av Marjorie Keniston McIntosh
    565,-

    The sequel to McIntosh's acclaimed work Autonomy and Community: The Royal Manor of Havering, 1200-1500.

  • - A Study of Fourteen German Village Populations in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
    av John E. Knodel
    909,-

    This book provides a detailed examination of the demographic behavior of families during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in a sample of fourteen villages in five different regions of Germany. It is based on the reconstituted family histories of vital events (births, deaths and marriages) compiled by genealogies for the entire populations of these villages.

  • - Emigration and Internal Migration in England and Wales 1861-1900
    av Dudley Baines
    591,-

    In this study Mr Baines has devised a method of estimating the county of birth of all permanent emigrants from England and Wales in the last four decades of the nineteenth century - some 2.3 million people.

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