Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 The Treballadors of Girona: Evidence of the Emergence of Wage Labour in Early Modern Catalonia in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
- 2 The Squatter Economy of the English Countryside: Building New Landless Communities in England, c. 1600–1900
- 3 The Rise of Landless Households in the Dutch Countryside, c. 1600–1900
- 4 ‘Gaining Ground’ in Flanders after the 1840s: Access to Land and the Coping Mechanisms of Landless and Semi-Landless Households, c. 1850–1900
- 5 Strategies of Survival, Landlessness and Forest Settlement in Flanders: The Forest of Houthulst in a Changing Landscape of Survival (c. 1500–1900)
- 6 Landless and Pauper Households in England, c. 1760–1835: A Comparison of Two Southern English Rural Communities
- 7 Landless Rural Households in France, 1852–1910
- 8 Survival in a Hostile Agrarian Regime: Landless and Semi-Landless Households in Seventeenth-Century Sweden and Finland
- 9 Farming Craftsmen? Access to Land and the Socio-Economic Position of Rural Artisans in Early Modern Finland
- 10 Landlessness and Marriage Restrictions: Tyrol and Vorarlberg in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
- 11 Cottages, Barns and Bake Houses: Landless Rural Households in North-Western Germany in the Eighteenth Century
- Bibliography
- Index
- Boydell Studies in Rural History
1 - The Treballadors of Girona: Evidence of the Emergence of Wage Labour in Early Modern Catalonia in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 October 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 The Treballadors of Girona: Evidence of the Emergence of Wage Labour in Early Modern Catalonia in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
- 2 The Squatter Economy of the English Countryside: Building New Landless Communities in England, c. 1600–1900
- 3 The Rise of Landless Households in the Dutch Countryside, c. 1600–1900
- 4 ‘Gaining Ground’ in Flanders after the 1840s: Access to Land and the Coping Mechanisms of Landless and Semi-Landless Households, c. 1850–1900
- 5 Strategies of Survival, Landlessness and Forest Settlement in Flanders: The Forest of Houthulst in a Changing Landscape of Survival (c. 1500–1900)
- 6 Landless and Pauper Households in England, c. 1760–1835: A Comparison of Two Southern English Rural Communities
- 7 Landless Rural Households in France, 1852–1910
- 8 Survival in a Hostile Agrarian Regime: Landless and Semi-Landless Households in Seventeenth-Century Sweden and Finland
- 9 Farming Craftsmen? Access to Land and the Socio-Economic Position of Rural Artisans in Early Modern Finland
- 10 Landlessness and Marriage Restrictions: Tyrol and Vorarlberg in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
- 11 Cottages, Barns and Bake Houses: Landless Rural Households in North-Western Germany in the Eighteenth Century
- Bibliography
- Index
- Boydell Studies in Rural History
Summary
This chapter presents new findings about changes in the agrarian social structure of early modern Catalonia that illustrate the rapid emergence of landless households. The presence of this group in the Catalonian countryside has largely been ignored by historians, because evidence of its existence is difficult to find. In this chapter, we will examine new evidence of the existence of a large workforce of French migrant wage labourers, which points to the wider presence of such wage-earners in the rural economy. This adds another layer to the deep structural changes that the existing historical literature has already identified.
After the social and economic crisis of the late medieval period, many historians have stressed that important changes in property rights and land tenure led to the formation of new social groups. In particular, social differentiation increased among peasant groups. These groups consisted of the owners of a mas – the main productive unit of the Catalan countryside – who were still serfs but were successful in keeping the usage rights of their land from the lords; and those peasants who had lost their right to possess a mas.
Like other holders of perpetual customary tenures in Europe, in effect mas owners, also known as pagesos (s. pages), became landowners and could add extensive plots of land as well as other masos to their estate via the land-market and marriage strategies. The labour requirements for such enlarged farms could not be satisfied by the peasant family itself, so farmers had to adopt many strategies in order to get their lands cultivated. The most important of these was the leasing out of a mas to another peasant family, who became masovers (sharecroppers). Thus, sharecropping contracts increased from the mid-sixteenth century.
However, it was not possible for all peasants to lease a mas if they did not own one. Many households who had tiny holdings or no land had to turn to wage labour to make ends meet. During the early modern period, this social group increased both in number and as a proportion of all households in Catalonia. Their emergence was linked to the appearance of a new social label from the first half of the sixteenth century: treballador (labourer).
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- Landless Households in Rural Europe, 1600-1900 , pp. 12 - 36Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2022