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The World of the Small Farmer: Tenure, Profit and Politics in the Early Modern Somerset Levels

The World of the Small Farmer: Tenure, Profit and Politics in the Early Modern Somerset Levels LANDSCAPES, 2017 VOL. 18, NO. 2, 200–203 BOOK REVIEWS The World of the Small Farmer: Tenure, Profit and Politics in the Early Modern Somerset Levels, by Patricia Croot, University of Hertfordshire Press (Studies in Regional and Local History 15), 2017, xiv + 226 pp., 16 figures (3 maps) and tables, £18.99 (Pbk), ISBN: 9781909291874 Taking the Brent Marsh of Somerset as her exemplar, Patricia Croot offers a wide-ranging study of rural economy and society in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Its principal focus is the area’s small farmers who she argues were eager to innovate, commercially-orien- tated and independent – as much in matters of politics and religion as in the management of their holdings. Altogether this is another welcome corrective to the old Marxist model which presented a peasantry oppressed and dispossessed by engrossing landlords. The Brent Marsh parishes, somewhat over 50,000 acres (20,500 ha) in the nineteenth century, lie between the Mendips, the Poldens, the Bristol Channel and, to the east, Glastonbury and Wells: roughly the western third of the Somerset Levels. The marshes (or moors as they are locally known), which are below sea level, remain subject to periodic flooding from the Bristol Channel and from http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Landscapes Taylor & Francis

The World of the Small Farmer: Tenure, Profit and Politics in the Early Modern Somerset Levels

Landscapes , Volume 18 (2): 2 – Jul 3, 2017

The World of the Small Farmer: Tenure, Profit and Politics in the Early Modern Somerset Levels

Landscapes , Volume 18 (2): 2 – Jul 3, 2017

Abstract

LANDSCAPES, 2017 VOL. 18, NO. 2, 200–203 BOOK REVIEWS The World of the Small Farmer: Tenure, Profit and Politics in the Early Modern Somerset Levels, by Patricia Croot, University of Hertfordshire Press (Studies in Regional and Local History 15), 2017, xiv + 226 pp., 16 figures (3 maps) and tables, £18.99 (Pbk), ISBN: 9781909291874 Taking the Brent Marsh of Somerset as her exemplar, Patricia Croot offers a wide-ranging study of rural economy and society in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Its principal focus is the area’s small farmers who she argues were eager to innovate, commercially-orien- tated and independent – as much in matters of politics and religion as in the management of their holdings. Altogether this is another welcome corrective to the old Marxist model which presented a peasantry oppressed and dispossessed by engrossing landlords. The Brent Marsh parishes, somewhat over 50,000 acres (20,500 ha) in the nineteenth century, lie between the Mendips, the Poldens, the Bristol Channel and, to the east, Glastonbury and Wells: roughly the western third of the Somerset Levels. The marshes (or moors as they are locally known), which are below sea level, remain subject to periodic flooding from the Bristol Channel and from

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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2018 Paul Stamper
ISSN
2040-8153
eISSN
1466-2035
DOI
10.1080/14662035.2018.1429714
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

LANDSCAPES, 2017 VOL. 18, NO. 2, 200–203 BOOK REVIEWS The World of the Small Farmer: Tenure, Profit and Politics in the Early Modern Somerset Levels, by Patricia Croot, University of Hertfordshire Press (Studies in Regional and Local History 15), 2017, xiv + 226 pp., 16 figures (3 maps) and tables, £18.99 (Pbk), ISBN: 9781909291874 Taking the Brent Marsh of Somerset as her exemplar, Patricia Croot offers a wide-ranging study of rural economy and society in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Its principal focus is the area’s small farmers who she argues were eager to innovate, commercially-orien- tated and independent – as much in matters of politics and religion as in the management of their holdings. Altogether this is another welcome corrective to the old Marxist model which presented a peasantry oppressed and dispossessed by engrossing landlords. The Brent Marsh parishes, somewhat over 50,000 acres (20,500 ha) in the nineteenth century, lie between the Mendips, the Poldens, the Bristol Channel and, to the east, Glastonbury and Wells: roughly the western third of the Somerset Levels. The marshes (or moors as they are locally known), which are below sea level, remain subject to periodic flooding from the Bristol Channel and from

Journal

LandscapesTaylor & Francis

Published: Jul 3, 2017

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