A Measure
of Wealth
The English Land Tax in
Historical Analysis
Donald E. Ginter
The land tax is the most important systematic
documentation, both in its geographical and chronological coverage, which
we have on British landed society between the Domesday of the Conqueror
and the New Domesday of the late Victorian era. Its use has been central
to many of the most important questions in modern British historiography.
The decline of the small landowner, the impact of enclosure, the measurement
of wealth inequalities, urban morphology, industrial development, and the
economic classification of the unreformed electorate. This is the first
comprehensive study of the reliability of the tax for pursuing such questions.
Through an examination of more than 5,000 parishes and townships in fifteen
historical counties (approximately one-third of England), the central chapters
of the book show that inequalities in the burden of national taxation were
far greater than anyone has anticipated. The book thus provides a highly
innovative analysis of the mechanisms and operation of local and national
administration in the countryside and of the limits of political authority
on the eve of the nineteenth-century 'Revolution in Government'.
744 pages 1992
1 85285 075 2 Cased £55.00
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