Cards (10)

  • what type of people were poor?
    • widows or abandoned women - survey in Norwich showed 2/3 were women
    • the sick and elderly who were incapable of work
    • orphaned children - survey in Norwich showed 40% of poor were under 16 years old
    • poeple on low wages
    • itinerants, vagrants, vagabonds
    • homeless moving from parishes looking for work
    • committed crimes
  • reasons for poverty were:
    • population growth
    • increasing demand for land
    • sheep farming
    • rising prices
    • enclosure
    • economic recessions
  • population growth:
    • population grew by 35%
    • from 3 million in 1551, to 4.2 million in 1601
    • growth of big towns like London and Norwich caused rising prices of rent
    • food prices rose as it had to be brought in from rural areas
  • increasing demand for land:
    • increase in population meant more people needed land
    • this increased rent and caused entry fees
    • entry fees are deposits at start of land rental
    • people could not afford to pay entry fees
  • rising prices:
    • wages did not increase as fast as prices
    • many people could not afford food due to cheap labour
  • sheep farming:
    • price of wool increased with demand
    • farming sheep was profitable and needed large farms
    • took land away from growing crops, therefore, less food
    • sheep farming did not require much labour, so rural unemployment increased
    • feeding sheep in winter meant crops grown only for animals to eat
    • many people going hungry in cities
  • enclosure:
    • replacing large open fields that were farmed by villagers with individual fields belonging to one person
    • led to small farms being merged and tentant farmers being evicted
    • caused unemployment and rural depopulation
    • those who could not afford increase in rent suffered
    • command land in villages were enclosed, causing hunger
  • economic recessions:
    • caused by trade embargos
    • created unempoyment and poverty
  • bad harvests:
    • those who ate what they grew became hungry
    • reduced food supply
    • drove up food prices
  • vagabonds/vagrants:
    • homeless people without jobs
    • roamed countryside
    • begged for money
    • stole and committed crimes to survive
    • feared by Elizabethan society