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The Rise and Fall of the Manorial System: A Critical Comment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2010
Extract
In a recent issue of this Journal North and Thomas outlined a model of the rise and fall of the manorial system, with special reference to England. Unfortunately, their model contains a number of inaccuracies which weaken quite seriously its applicability. The propositions of the model are based upon a confusion of terms and an oversight of authorities, both of which have led to a questionable factual and theoretical interpretation. In the following paragraphs an attempt will be made to elaborate upon these criticisms, and to suggest an alternative approach.
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References
1 North, D. and Thomas, R., “The Rise and Fall of the Manorial System: A Theoretical Model,” Journal of Economic History, XXXI (Dec. 1971), 777–803CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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29 This may be judged at two levels: first, the total economy of the country, and second, the farming community, The criteria for distinguishing a peasant economy as the characteristic feature of a region or country have been spelt out by Thorner, “Peasant Economy as a Category,” pp. 203 ff. His argument is further crystallized by Franklin, S. H., “Reflections on the Peasantry,” Pacific Viewpont, III, 1 (1962), pp. 4–9Google Scholaret passim. At the level of the farm the criteria for separating peasants from “agriculturalists” are summed up by Henshall, J. D., “Models of Agricultural Activity,” Socio-Economic Models in Geography, Chorley, R. J. and Haggett, P. (eds.) (London: Methuen, 1968), pp. 430–432Google Scholar.
30 For an expansion of this point see, Prince, H. C., “Real, Imagined, and Abstract Worlds of the Past,” Progress in Geography, III, Board, C., Chorley, R. J., Haggett, P. and Stoddart, D. R. (eds.) (London: Edward Arnold, 1971), pp. 14Google Scholar, 23–4.
31 Perhaps the most important advances in recent years have sprung from the translation of Chayanov, A. V., The Theory of Peasant Economy, Kerblay, B., Thorner, D., AND Smith, R. E. F. (eds. and trans.) (Homewood, Illinois: American Economic Association, Translation Series, 1966)Google Scholar, and from the work of Franklin, S. H. in “Systems of Production: Systems of Appropriation,” Pacific Viewpoint, VI, 2 (1965), 145–166Google Scholar; “The Case of the Missing Chef” (Review of Chayanov), Pacific Viewpoint, IX, 2 (1968), 196–201Google Scholar; and, The European Peasantry: The Final Phase, (London: Methuen, 1969), pp. 1–19Google Scholar. The work of Chayanov, first published in the 1920's, relates to the Russian peasantry under the last decades of Tsarism. In 1969, Franklin wrote, “… looking at the same phenomenon [peasant economy] generations apart we [Chayanov and Franklin] produced a similar sort of explanation,” The European Peasantry, p. xiii.
32 See Bloch, M., “Toward a Comparative History of European Societies,” Enterprise and Secular Change: Readings in Economic History Lane, F. C. and Riemersma, J. C. (eds.) (Homewood, Illinois: American Economic Association, 1953), pp. 494–521Google Scholar. For further formulations see, Raftis, J. A., “Marc Bloch's Comparative Method and the Rural History of Medieval England,” Medieval Studies, XXIV (1962), 349–368CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Sewell, W. H. Jr. “Marc Bloch and the Logic of Comparative History,” History and Theory, VI, 2 (1967), 208–218CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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35 N. J. Smelser, “Toward a Theory of Modernization,” Tribal and Peasant Economies, pp. 29–48.
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