PhD ThesisIn view of the political importance and the economic position
of the landlord in England during the 18th and 19th centuries it is
perhaps surprising that his economic activities have till lately
received little attention from 20th century economic historians. As
a vehicle for politico-historical propaganda the history of the
agricultural labourer offered more scope for those whose dogma already
had damned the capitalist activities of the landlord. A lack of sympathy may account for a lack of interest but scarcely excuses it.
In the last few years the work of such historians as Professors
Habbakuk and Spring and Mr. F. M. L. Thompson have changed the position
radically, but there is still no published work of analysis of the
central problem of their income-rents. Coal interests may have been
important for the Lambtons or the Londonderrys, but agricultural rents
for the majority remained the principal source and no detailed information
of changes in this between 1700 and 1850 has to my knowledge been published
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