Measure of Wealth
The English Land Tax in Historical Analysis
- Publisher
- McGill-Queen's University Press
- Initial publish date
- Feb 1992
- Category
- General
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9780773562264
- Publish Date
- Feb 1992
- List Price
- $110.00
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Description
Ginter focuses on the years 1780 to 1832, a period for which many land tax records survive and precisely when modern forms of political organization began to emerge and when industrialization and enclosure are thought to have altered the fabric of society and the economy. Through an examination of more than 5,000 parishes in fifteen historical counties -- approximately one-third of England -- he shows that inequalities in the burden of national taxation were far greater than anyone has estimated. Having researched both local and national taxation procedures, he reveals that, on the eve of the nineteenth-century "Revolution in Government," the tenantry and yeomanry were administratively far more independent of parliamentary statute and of their local gentry and magistracy than has previously been suggested. Drawing on evidence from the three ridings of Yorkshire, he discloses other problems associated with the land tax duplicates. While Ginter argues that the land tax duplicates are wholly inadequate for the study of the fortunes of the small yeoman and that the literature on this subject must be fundamentally reconsidered, he reveals a method which can reliably exploit the land tax duplicates as a systemic documentation. He contends that the full potential for studies based centrally on the land tax has scarcely begun to be explored.
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Editorial Reviews
"The scholarship is absolutely, painstakingly, sound. Quite apart from its substantive findings, A Measure of Wealth can stand on its merits as a demonstration of historical method consistently directed at a cluster of strategic problems. The author has taken great care to keep his discussion lucid -- no mean feat on a subject like this." John Money, Department of History, University of Victoria.
"Ginter is a reputable historian of proven competence. Here he makes an original and significant contribution, challenging and disputing the value of a large body of scholarship. He has made his work accessible by establishing a certain voice, which is persuasive but not authoritarian, one which combines confidence with modesty." Christopher Kent, Department of History, University of Saskatchewan.
"The scholarship is absolutely, painstakingly, sound. Quite apart from its substantive findings, A Measure of Wealth can stand on its merits as a demonstration of historical method consistently directed at a cluster of strategic problems. The author has taken great care to keep his discussion lucid -- no mean feat on a subject like this." John Money, Department of History, University of Victoria. "Ginter is a reputable historian of proven competence. Here he makes an original and significant contribution, challenging and disputing the value of a large body of scholarship. He has made his work accessible by establishing a certain voice, which is persuasive but not authoritarian, one which combines confidence with modesty." Christopher Kent, Department of History, University of Saskatchewan.