Elizabethan poverty Flashcards

1
Q

What made you poor?

A
  • spending more than 80% of your wages on food

- needing financial help (poor relief) or charity (alms)

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2
Q

Types of poor (6)

A
  • widows or women abandoned by husbands and their family
  • the sick and the elderly
  • orphaned children
  • people on low wages
  • itinerants
  • vagrants and vagabonds
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3
Q

How did population growth increase poverty?

A
  • the population grew by 35% throughout the country- particularly fast in the cities
  • Londons population was 150,000 (10 x bigger than England’s second-biggest city Norwich)
  • increased demand in food = drove up prices
  • increasing labour supply = drove down wages
  • urban people didn’t grow crops -= had to buy
  • ordinary people could no longer provide for themselves or their family
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4
Q

what did people use common land for?

A
  • collecting firewood
  • graze their pigs
  • forage for food
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5
Q

when was the cloth trade especially bad?

A

1563-64, 1568-73 and 1586-88

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6
Q

why did sheep farming become popular and also mention the land needed for sheep farming

A
  • 81.6% of England’s export (biggest export)
  • the price of wool increased as demand for wool grew
    * sheep farming became profitable and landowners turned to it to make money
  • sheep farmers had lots of sheep and needed land to keep them on
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7
Q

why was an increase in sheep farming a problem?

A
  • took common land and land that had once been used for growing crops
  • didn’t require much labour- unemployment rose
  • feeding sheep over winter meant that some crops were only grown fro animals to eat which angered people when large numbers of people were going hungry and couldn’t afford bread
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8
Q

what was enclosure?

A

replacing large open fields, which were farmed by villagers, to individual fields owned by one person

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9
Q

Why did farmers enclose land?

3

A
  • prevent livestock from wandering off - so they can control animal breeding and produce better livestock
  • to stop them from trampling other crops
  • enclosed fields were easier to drain and made planting and caring for larger crops easier
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10
Q

How did enclosure increase poverty? (4)

A
  • led to small farms being merged and tenant farmers evicted which caused unemployment and rural depopulation
  • landowners often grew rich but ordinary farm labourers, who couldn’t afford the increasing rents suffered
  • more efficient techniques for growing crops and sheep farming = fewer labourers = unemployment
  • common land was enclosed: this was vital for survival as they used it for grazing pigs and subsistence farming etc.
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11
Q

why was subsistence farming important?

A

this was where people grew their crops so it was vital for their survival

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12
Q

How did land values and rent cause an increase in poverty?

A

money that could be earned from farming increased = landowners increased rents of tenant farmers: those who couldn’t pay had to make way for wealthier more successful tenants

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13
Q

How did bad harvests affect poverty?

4

A
  • caused food prices to rise because there wasn’t enough food to go around
  • food grew much more slowly than the population
  • bread prices, the basis of most peoples diet rose fastest of all
  • more people meant lower wages, people struggled to pay for bread
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14
Q

how did wages cause poverty to increase?

A
  • wages did not rise as fast as prices

- more people wanting work = labour was cheaper because many landowners and employers cut wages to keep their cost down.

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15
Q

how did demand in land increase poverty?

A
  • more demand for land meant landowners could charger higher rents for the land where people lived or farmed
  • entry fees went up too, some tenant couldn’t afford to keep their land; others evicted for sheep farming
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16
Q

who were the impotent poor?

A

the old and sick

17
Q

what were the two types of poor?

A

undeserving and deserving/impotent poor

18
Q

why was the problem of the able-bodied poor more noticeable in towns?

A
  • there were so many: very visible

- many people who lost their livelihoods in rural areas came to towns in search of work

19
Q

what was poor relief?

A

financial help paid for by the poor rate

20
Q

what was the poor-rate?

A
  • a local tax organised by the JPs, with the proceeds spent on improving the lives of the poor. The poor were given money or things to make and sell
  • poor rates were collected on a weekly basis and distributed to the impotent poor
21
Q

when was the statue of artificers?

A

1563

22
Q

what were the aims and features of the statue of artificers?

A

Aim: ensure that poor relief was collected
Features:
- refusing to pay the poor rates could result in imprisonment
- officials failing to organise poor relief could be fined up to £20

23
Q

when was the vagabond act?

A

1572

24
Q

what was the aim of the vagabond act?

A

to deter vagrancy as the parliament felt that vagrants posed a threat to public order

25
Q

what were features of the vagabond act?

A
  • vagrants were to be whipped and a hole drilled in each ear
  • vagrants to be imprisoned 2nd time, death penalty 3rd
  • established national poor rate for the 1st time which sheltered the impotent poor
  • Jps had to keep a register of the poor
  • towns and cities were given the responsibility to find work for able-bodied poor
26
Q

When was the poor relief act?

A

1576

27
Q

what was the aim of the poor relief act?

A

distinguish between able-bodied and impotent poor and help able-bodied find work

28
Q

what happened in the poor relief act?

A
  • Jps provided the able-bodied poor with wool and raw materials to enable to work by making things to sell
  • these who refused to do so were sent to a special prison funded by poor rates called the house of correction
29
Q

What was the impact of Elizabethan poor laws?

*independence and dignity of the poor

A

poor laws help recognise that unemployment was a genuine issue: not laziness. By making the poor make and sell things it helped keep independence and dignity

30
Q

Why did poverty continue to be a major problem throughout Elizabeth 1’s reign?

A
  • conflict in Spain and the revolt in the Netherlands, which hit trade in England badly
  • Pamphlet writers stirred up fear of vagabonds as more people appeared in towns and cities