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The Estates of the English Crown 1558-1640The Estates of the English Crown 1558-1640

The Estates of the English Crown 1558-1640

R. W. Hoyle

About this book

This collection of essays is the first full account of the largest estate in early modern England, against which the fortunes of all other estates may be judged. Previous accounts have tended to regard the Crown lands as a resource to be plundered by successive monarchs in times of need: much of the monastic land confiscated by Henry VIII had been sold by the time of his death, and the estates had mostly been liquidated to meet the demands of expenditure by 1640. It is not denied in these essays that the estates suffered from the attrition of periodic sale, but the estates are here seen as a continuing enterprise of complexity and sophistication. The volume looks sympathetically at the problems of administering estates quite different in scale to any others in England, and attempts to show how what has often been seen as weak management on the Elizabethan estates was a reasonable response to insurmountable difficulties. What emerges more generally is a sense not only of endeavour but also of failure. Each essay is concerned with the dialogue between the Exchequer and its local administrators and tenants. The success and failure of initiatives launched by the Exchequer is illustrated by examples drawn from many communities throughout England. The essays draw on a wide range of sources to explain why the estates could never satisfy the demands placed on them and how the problems of tenurial reform identified here were far from unique.

Details

OL Work ID
OL17195044W

Subjects

Crown landsHistory

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.