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3 - A Different Pattern of Employment: Servants in Rural England c.1500–1660

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 April 2018

Jane Whittle
Affiliation:
University of Exeter
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Summary

Ann Kussmaul's classic study of servants in early modern rural England was published in 1981. It built upon the earlier work of J. Hajnal, who mapped out the distinctive features of life-cycle service in north-west Europe, and Peter Laslett, who demonstrated the presence of large numbers of servants in early modern England. Although Laslett and Kussmaul aimed to discuss the whole of the early modern period, the sources they used were heavily weighted to the period from 1660 to 1830. This chapter argues that as a result, they failed to identify important changes in the pattern of servant employment over time in England. Both Laslett and Kussmaul made use of a set of one hundred ‘household listings’ describing the composition of households in particular communities, which were identified and transcribed by the Cambridge Group for the Study of Population and Social Structure. Only five of these dated from before 1660, and three of those related to towns. The main source used by Kussmaul to map the incidence of service in the period before 1660 was the seasonality of marriages recorded in parish registers, which could be measured from the 1550s to the 1830s. She argued that changes in the seasonality of marriage reflected levels of servant employment as many servants married just after leaving service: in areas of southern and eastern England where arable agriculture dominated, servant contracts began and ended at Michaelmas (29 September) after the grain harvest. Thus the prevalence to October marriages indicated the incidence of service over time.

Using this evidence Kussmaul proposed that the incidence of service ‘did not remain fixed, but rose and fell in two major cycles from c.1450–1900’. In the first cycle October marriages peaked around 1560, before declining gradually to the 1630s, and then dipping sharply during the Civil War years of the 1640s and 1650s. In the second cycle the incidence rose quite steeply in the late seventeenth century to a peak in 1740, before declining again over the following century. Kussmaul argued that the underlying cause of these cycles were demographic. As population increased in the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries, so did the cost of living, and real wages fell, as can be seen clearly from the day wage rates for male agricultural labourers compiled by Gregory Clark.

Type
Chapter
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Servants in Rural Europe
1400–1900
, pp. 57 - 76
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2017

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