A warm and well-informed account of almshouses [and] a sturdy piece of scholarship.

JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY

Fills an importance gap in our knowledge of early modern almhouse history...It will be essential reading.

FAMILY AND COMMUNITY HISTORICAL RESEARCH SOCIETY NEWSLETTER

Nicholls (thoroughly establishes how almshouses were deeply embedded in the welfare system of post-Reformation England. . . . Nicholls uses a great deal of statistical data, often expressing it through numerous charts, graphs, and tables, and provides photographs that bring the topic to life. Recommended.

CHOICE

Addresses a neglected element of English welfare history, examining the role and significance of English almshouses in the period 1550 - 1725 and the contribution they made within the developing welfare systems of the time Almshouses providing accommodation for poor people are a common feature of the towns and villages of England, visible representations of historic attitudes towards the poor. The period after the Reformation saw not only the survival of many medieval institutions but also a remarkable number of new foundations, as people from many different backgrounds used their wealth to revive and remodel this ancient form of provision to meet new needs. This book addresses a neglected element of English welfare history, examining the role and significance of English almshouses in the period 1550 - 1725 and the contribution they made within the developing welfare systems of the time. Drawing on archival evidence, the book analyses why almshouses were founded and the reasons for the continuing popularity of this particular form of charity; who the occupants were; what benefits they received; and how residents wereexpected to live their lives. It challenges the assumption that Post-Reformation almshouses were places of privilege for the respectable deserving poor and reveals a surprising variation in the socio-economic status of almspeopleand their experience of almshouse life. The book places these findings in the context of the contemporary national and local debates about poverty and poor relief and argues that early modern almshouses took on a distinct and newidentity within the changed landscape of relief provision in post-Reformation England. Many almshouses played an integral role in the early welfare provision of their local communities, yet, ultimately, their significance was affected by the emergence of harsher public provision in the new workhouses of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. ANGELA NICHOLLS is Associate Fellow at the University of Warwick
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Addresses a neglected element of English welfare history, examining the role and significance of English almshouses in the period 1550 - 1725 and the contribution they made within the developing welfare systems of the time
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Introduction Housing Policy Chronology and Distribution of Almshouse Foundations Almshouse Founders and Their Motivations Almshouse Residents and the Experience of Almshouse Life The Material Benefits of an Almshouse Place Case Study: A Seventeenth-Century Welfare Republic - the Parish of Leamington Hastings and its Almshouse Conclusion Appendix 1. Almshouse Foundations by County, 1550 - 1870 Appendix 2. Size of Almshouses in Eight English Counties, 1550 - 1725 Appendix 3. Almshouse Numbers and Places in Three Counties, 1550 - 1800 Appendix 4. Minimum Subsistence Budget in 1690s Adjusted for Inflation Bibliography
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781783271788
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Vekt
442 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
291

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