A Short History of English Agriculture eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 420 pages of information about A Short History of English Agriculture.

A Short History of English Agriculture eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 420 pages of information about A Short History of English Agriculture.
Lord Berkeley, like other landlords, went often in progress from one of his manors and farmhouses to another, making his stay at each of them for one or two nights, overseeing and directing the husbandry.  The castle of the great noble consumed an enormous amount of food in the course of the year; from two manors on the Berkeley estate came to the ‘standinghouse’ of the lord in twelve months, 17,000 eggs, 1,008 pigeons, 91 capons, 192 hens, 288 ducks, 388 chickens, 194 pigs, 45 calves, 315 quarters of wheat, 304 quarters of oats; and from several other manors came the like or greater store, besides goats, sheep, oxen, butter, cheese, nuts, honey, &c.[128] Even the lavish hospitality of the lords, and the great number of their retainers, must have had some difficulty in disposing of these huge supplies.

The examining of their bailiff’s accounts must have taken a considerable portion of the landlord’s time, for those of each manor were kept most minutely, and set forth, among other items, ’in what sort he husbanded’ the demesne farms, ’what sorts of cattle he kept in them, and what kinds of graine he yearly sowed according to the quality and condition of the ground, and how those kinds of graine each second or third yeare were exchanged or brought from one manor to another as the vale corne into an upland soyle, and contrarily’.  And we are told incidentally he ‘set with hand, not sowed his beanes’.  He was also accustomed to move his live stock from one manor to another, as they needed it.

The accounts also stated what days’ works were due from each tenant according to the season of the year, and at the end of each year there was a careful valuation of live and dead stock.[129]

The difference between the smaller gentry and the more important yeomen[130] who farmed their own land must have been very slight.  No doubt both of them were very rough and ignorant men, who knew a great deal about the cultivation of their land and very little about anything else.  We may be sure that the ordinary house of both was generally of wood; as there is no stone in many parts of England, and bricks were not reintroduced till the fourteenth century and spread slowly.  Even in Elizabeth’s reign, Harrison[131] tells us that ’the ancient houses of our gentry are yet for the most part of strong timber’, and he even thinks that houses made of oak were luxurious, for in times past men had been contented with houses of willow, plum, and elm, but now nothing but oak was good enough; and he quaintly says that the men who lived in the willow houses were as tough as oak, and those who lived in the oak as soft as willow.  There are very few mansions left of the time before Edward III, for being of timber they naturally decayed.

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A Short History of English Agriculture from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.