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OverviewSecure property rights are widely considered to be an essential prerequisite for sustained economic development; in Britain it is debated whether they have been secure since the medieval period or only established in the mid-seventeenth century. Within this context, Sean Bottomley examines wardship - the Crown's prerogative right(s) to appropriate landed estates which had descended to a legal minor until they attained their majority, to take custody of the child and, where they were unmarried, to decide their marriage partner. Bottomley demonstrates that this constituted a significant yet grossly inefficient and corrupted source of crown revenue, one that inflicted tangible economic penalties. It was also indicative of the decaying capacity of the early Stuart state and Bottomley concludes that without the constitutional changes of the mid to late seventeenth-century, Britain would not have industrialised in the eighteenth-century. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sean Bottomley (Cardiff University)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Weight: 0.554kg ISBN: 9781009384353ISBN 10: 100938435 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 06 November 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents1. Introduction; 2. Wardship and the feudal incidents, 1066–1540; 3. The court of wards and liveries, 1540–1642; 4. The court of wards: officers and servants; 5. The early Stuart fiscal-state; 6. Law in the court of wards; 7. The economic consequences of wardship; 8. 'Like horses in Smithfielde'. buying a wardship; 9. Wardship and the wars of the three kingdoms; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.Reviews'An important new work which re-interprets opposition to the Court of Wards from an institutional economics point of view, arguing for the vital importance of its abolition in securing property rights against the crown.' Craig Muldrew, author of The Economy of Obligation: The Culture of Credit and Social Relations in Early Modern England Author InformationSean Bottomley is an economic historian at Cardiff University. His first book, The British Patent System during the Industrial Revolution (2014), won both the Economic History Society's biennial First Monograph Prize and the Selden Society's David Yale Prize. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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