Enclosures of the England Commons: Difference between revisions

From P2P Foundation
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with " '''* Article: Raymond Williams, “Enclosures, Commons and Communities,” in The Country and the City (Oxford University Press, 1973), pp. 96-107.''' URL = [https://books....")
 
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
'''* Article: Raymond Williams, “Enclosures, Commons and Communities,” in The Country and the City (Oxford University Press, 1973), pp. 96-107.'''
'''* Article: Raymond Williams, “Enclosures, Commons and Communities,” in The Country and the City (Oxford University Press, 1973), pp. 96-107.'''


Line 12: Line 10:
"From 1776 to 1825, the English Parliament passed more than 4,000 Acts that served to appropriate common lands from commoners, chiefly to the benefit of politically connected landowners.  These enclosures of the commons seized about 25 percent of all cultivated acreage in England, according to historian Raymond Williams, and concentrated ownership of it in a small minority of the population.  These “lawful” enclosures also dispossessed millions of citizens, swept away traditional ways of life, and forcibly introduced the new economy of industrialization, occupational specialties and large-scale production.  “The many miles of new fences and walls, the new paper rights” – and the many “great houses” that came to dominate the rural landscape – “were the formal declaration of where the power now lay,” writes Williams."
"From 1776 to 1825, the English Parliament passed more than 4,000 Acts that served to appropriate common lands from commoners, chiefly to the benefit of politically connected landowners.  These enclosures of the commons seized about 25 percent of all cultivated acreage in England, according to historian Raymond Williams, and concentrated ownership of it in a small minority of the population.  These “lawful” enclosures also dispossessed millions of citizens, swept away traditional ways of life, and forcibly introduced the new economy of industrialization, occupational specialties and large-scale production.  “The many miles of new fences and walls, the new paper rights” – and the many “great houses” that came to dominate the rural landscape – “were the formal declaration of where the power now lay,” writes Williams."


[[Category:Law and the Commons Project]]
 
=More information=
 
Fairlie, S. (2009) 'A Short History of Enclosure in Britain', The Land Magazine. Available at:
https://www.thelandmagazine.org.uk/articles/short-history-enclosure-britain (Accessed: 2 January 2024).


[[Category:Articles]]
[[Category:Articles]]
[[Category:Commons]]
[[Category:Commons]]
[[Category:Law_and_the_Commons_Project]]

Latest revision as of 17:41, 20 April 2024

* Article: Raymond Williams, “Enclosures, Commons and Communities,” in The Country and the City (Oxford University Press, 1973), pp. 96-107.

URL = Google version


Description

David Bollier:

"From 1776 to 1825, the English Parliament passed more than 4,000 Acts that served to appropriate common lands from commoners, chiefly to the benefit of politically connected landowners. These enclosures of the commons seized about 25 percent of all cultivated acreage in England, according to historian Raymond Williams, and concentrated ownership of it in a small minority of the population. These “lawful” enclosures also dispossessed millions of citizens, swept away traditional ways of life, and forcibly introduced the new economy of industrialization, occupational specialties and large-scale production. “The many miles of new fences and walls, the new paper rights” – and the many “great houses” that came to dominate the rural landscape – “were the formal declaration of where the power now lay,” writes Williams."


More information

Fairlie, S. (2009) 'A Short History of Enclosure in Britain', The Land Magazine. Available at: https://www.thelandmagazine.org.uk/articles/short-history-enclosure-britain (Accessed: 2 January 2024).