
Published online:
24 September 2013
Published in print:
10 August 2000
Online ISBN:
9780191776564
Print ISBN:
9780192854025
Contents
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Population Growth Population Growth
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Expansion of Settlement and Cultivation Expansion of Settlement and Cultivation
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The Free, the Servile, and the Poor The Free, the Servile, and the Poor
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Management of Estates Management of Estates
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Chapter
4 (page 68)p. 68The Economy in the Early Middle Ages
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Published:August 2000
Cite
Gillingham, John, and Ralph A. Griffiths, 'The Economy in the Early Middle Ages', Medieval Britain: A Very Short Introduction, Very Short Introductions (Oxford , 2000; online edn, Oxford Academic, 24 Sept. 2013), https://doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780192854025.003.0004, accessed 17 May 2025.
Abstract
In the eleventh century, England was predominantly an agrarian economy. Over 90 per cent of the people lived in the country. ‘The Economy in the Early Middle Ages’ looks at the economic situation of Britain during the eleventh century and beyond. What happened to the English economy during the 200 years after 1086? Fundamentally, there was little change. England was no more urbanized in 1286 than it had been in 1086. The period saw no agricultural revolution. However, the period was one of huge population growth. There were economic consequences of this increase in population, including the physical expansion of settlement and cultivation.
Keywords:
Bury St Edmunds, Domesday Book, East Anglia, economy, Edward I, Henry III, land tenure, Middle Ages, population, St Albans
Series
Very Short Introductions
Collection:
Very Short Introductions
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