Poverty Flashcards
Poverty
Increasing issue in Tudor England, as were associated problems like unemployment and vagabondage.
Causes of poverty
population growth
Steady growth across the period, except in the 1550s (poor harvests and an influenza epidemic in Mary’s reign).
- 1525 = 2.25 million.
- 1551 = 3.01 million.
- 1601 = 4.1 million.
Causes of poverty
rises of prices and falling of wages
As population rose, so did the pressure on resources, particularly food. Therefore, farmers and merchants could charge higher prices for their goods, leading to price inflation which was made worse because the govt didn’t have the ability to ensure its population could always be fed, especially with poor harvests (1519-21, 1527-29, 1549-51 and 1586-87) which reduced crop yield and led to death.
Causes of poverty
dissolusion of monastries
The monasteries were a traditional source of support and alms (giving food, money or other forms of charity) for the poor.
Result of poverty
Why is rising unemployment an issue
- May lead to social and political unrest.
- The Tudor monarchs were increasingly keen to work more closely with the local authorities and pass more social and economic legislation.
Result of poverty
Vagrancy and begging
- Assumed jobs were available yet vagrants were too lazy to work.
- Used punishment to try to control the problem but more difficult to deal with wanderers, especially in times of political unrest.
- Explains why many laws made them return to their own parishes to seek help - known to local authorities and easily avoids the instability and spread of seditious ideas that undermine the Tudor state and the social order.
Socioeconomic legislation before 1563
Solution to controlling vagrants and beggers - HVII
- 1495 Law - ordered beggars and the idle poor be put in the stocks for three days, whipped and returned to their original parish.
- Poor relief was based on voluntary contributions from wealthy parishioners.
Solution to controlling vagrants and beggers - HVIII
- As poverty grew, punishment became more severe.
- 1531 P Law ordered vagrants to be whipped and the impotent poor were to be licensed by the JPs to beg.
Solution to controlling vagrants and beggers - Edward VI
- Most severe laws passed in 1547, reflecting the rising socio-economic issues with the Vagrancy Act = a vagrant was defined as someone who was able-bodied and who had been without a master or employment for three days.
- Punishments - branded a ‘V’ into the person’s chest and forced to work as a slave for two years for the person who reported them - considered so harsh that local authorities found it impossible to enforce.
- Repealed in 1550 and replaced in 1552 - new law required registration of the incompetent poor, for the first time, and that Parish Priests and bishops to place more pressure on those reluctant to make contributions to alms.
Solution to poverty: regulating wages and prices
Attempted to solve the issue through parliamentary statute:
- 1547/1555 Acts regulated cloth-making in East Anglia and Worchester.
Increasingly regulated aspects of the economy:
- 1536 = ordered local officials to find work for beggars and organise collections for the impotent poor - so radical that it wasn’t renewed but paved the way for further attempts.
- Due to alarming food price rises in the 1540s and 1550s = encouraged food production, banned price and wage fixing in 1548-49 and forbade the export of corn if prices were above a certain level in 1554.
Why was the Statute of Artificers (1562) introduced
- Liz inherited a country in a socioeconomic crisis with a decreasing, malnourished population (3.01M to 2.98M 1554-6), caused by poor harvests (1554-6) and disease (influenza epidemic 1554-6). Generally the crisis was seen in 2 ways:
1) Lack of valuable food led to higher prices = poor produced just enough food from their lands to survive, or entirely reliant on buying goods. The combo of poor harvests and prices plunged people into poverty
2) Population decline pushed up wages = those who survived and had the skills to offer were able to ask and get for higher wages from employers.
- Placed pressure on the central govt and authorities in the 1550s as vagrancy causes social disorder which made those those at the top of the hierarchy nervous, introducing the Act (holistic attempt to address all issues of Tudor society).
Main terms of the Statute of the Artificers
- All unmarried people under the age of 30 - compelled to work and accept any job offer.
- People aged 12-60 required to work on the land, unless gentry, heir to lands worth £10 a year, or goods worth £40, employed, skilled in a craft or attending education.
- Local JPs assessed and set wages annually.
- Fixed hours of work: Summer = 5am-7/8pm with 2 ½ hour meal breaks while the Winter was dawn to sunset.
- Apprenticeships for seven years - compulsory for any skilled occupation.
The Statute of Artificers were significant because…
- Lasted for the Tudor period, replacing all previous piecemeal attempts at socio-economic legislation.
- Increased the importance of the JPs’s role in the regulation of the social and economic affairs of their region.
- Enhanced the importance of apprenticeships and protected the status of skilled craftsmen = unable to enter progression without the training.
- Emphasised the social hierarchy and food production as an essential job, involving every lower class individual.
- Implies a growing partnership between localities and centre = considered a local trend.
The Statute of Artificers were not significant because it was backward-looking in its aims
- Govt tried to control wage increases and the social structure since the 14th century, responding to local experimentation with wage assessments and control - began in the 1550s.
- EXAMPLE = Corporations of London and York tried to stop builders’ wages rising out of control in 1551-52.
- EXAMPLE = Socio-economic crisis encouraged more authorities to try cap wages, especially in 1560-62.
The Statute of Artificers were not significant because it didn’t solve all the issues
Further acts were required to pass to deal with the problems caused by the socioeconomic crisis - e.g the 1572 and 1576 Poor Laws and the Poor Law of 1598.