ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1977, this book investigates the controversial question as to whether England has seen two industrial revolutions, whether economic changes in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in England deserve to be distinguished as a period in which an economic ‘revolution’ nearly took place, but eventually aborted. The book considers the changes that took place in the most important industries in the period and estimates the significance of these changes for the overall structure of the English economy. It also assesses the attitudes of the various historians involved in the debate and the nature of the evidence on which their arguments have been based. The combination of critical assessment in the introduction and the evidence of the 34 original documents will guarantee a wide readership of the book among students and teachers of economic history.

part |55 pages

Selected Documents

chapter 1|3 pages

Diversity of Weights and Measures

chapter 2|2 pages

Typical Accounts of Wood Sales

chapter 4|2 pages

Side-Effects of Iron Working

chapter 5|2 pages

Licensing a Collection for Hastings, 1578

chapter 12|1 pages

Accounting Practices

chapter 14|2 pages

The Manufacture of Alum

chapter 15|1 pages

The Inland Salt Production

chapter 16|3 pages

Salt Works near Tynemouth, 1634

chapter 17|1 pages

Observations for Glass

chapter 19|5 pages

Tobias Gentleman on North Sea Fishing

chapter 22|1 pages

The Valuation of a Ship, 1579

chapter 24|1 pages

Quality Control of Cloth, 1594

chapter 25|1 pages

The Tanner’s Costs

chapter 28|1 pages

Repairs to the Bridge at Burton, 1569

chapter 30|1 pages

Problems of the Staplers in the 1540s

chapter 31|1 pages

Thomas Mun on Foreign Exchange

chapter 33|1 pages

A Market at Bromley Paget, 1553

chapter 34|1 pages

Newcastle in 1634