The structure of the market for wool in early medieval Lincolnshire
Peasant producers are now recognized as having played an important part in the late medieval economy: this can also be said of peasant producers in eastern England before the Conquest. In the wake of the Viking invasions Scandinavian settlers from the second half of the ninth century entered a regio...
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description | Peasant producers are now recognized as having played an important part in the late medieval economy: this can also be said of peasant producers in eastern England before the Conquest. In the wake of the Viking invasions Scandinavian settlers from the second half of the ninth century entered a region that was already commercially active. Independent farmers raised sheep, possibly a newly introduced breed, on the Lincolnshire Wolds and marketed their wool. A network of Anglo-Scandinavian shippers and traders, members of a merchant elite, controlled important places on river routes. That Lincolnshire was an area of light manorialization and many sokemen had an invigorating effect on its economy. Peasant producers had comparative freedom and by controlling markets and extracting cash from the inhabitants of their sokes Anglo-Norman lords profited from an economy that had been invigorated by Scandinavian enterprise. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1111/j.1468-0289.2010.00577.x |
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Peasant producers had comparative freedom and by controlling markets and extracting cash from the inhabitants of their sokes Anglo-Norman lords profited from an economy that had been invigorated by Scandinavian enterprise.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0013-0117</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1468-0289</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0289.2010.00577.x</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd</publisher><subject>Coinage ; Counties ; Economic growth ; Economic history ; England ; Farm economics ; Market structure ; Medieval history ; Merchants ; Peasant class ; Peasant societies ; Peasants ; Plant spines ; Scandinavia ; Sheep ; Sheep farming ; Studies ; Textiles ; Trade ; United Kingdom ; Wool ; Wool industry</subject><ispartof>The Economic history review, 2012-05, Vol.65 (2), p.674-700</ispartof><rights>Economic History Society 2012</rights><rights>Copyright Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 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subjects | Coinage Counties Economic growth Economic history England Farm economics Market structure Medieval history Merchants Peasant class Peasant societies Peasants Plant spines Scandinavia Sheep Sheep farming Studies Textiles Trade United Kingdom Wool Wool industry |
title | The structure of the market for wool in early medieval Lincolnshire |
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