douglas99
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Here you are Douglas -- a bit of reading if you are actually interested in finding out about this topic. Let me know when you've finished and want to engage in a proper discussion:
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Economy, 97 (1989), pp. 93–114.
Campbell, B. M. S., English seigniorial agriculture 1250–1450 (Cambridge, 2000).
Campbell, B. M. S., ‘The agrarian problem in the early fourteenth century’, Past and Present, 188 (2005),
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Chandra, R. K., ‘Nutrition, immunity and infection: from basic knowledge of dietary manipulation of immune
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Davenport, R., Boulton, J., and Schwarz, L., ‘Infant and young adult mortality in London’s West End,
1750–1824’, Newcastle Univ., The Pauper Lives Project working paper (2010) http://research.ncl.ac.uk/
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Ecclestone, M., ‘Mortality of rural landless men before the Black Death: the Glastonbury head-tax lists’, Local
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Gelman, A. and Hill, J., Data analysis using regression and multilevel/hierarchical models (NewYork, 2007).
Gottfried, R. S., Epidemic disease in fifteenth century England: the medical response and the demographic consequences
(New Brunswick, NJ, 1978).
Hatcher, J., ‘Mortality in the fifteenth century: some new evidence’, Economic History Review, 2nd ser., XXXIX
(1986), pp. 19–38.
Hatcher, J., Piper, A. J., and Stone, D., ‘Monastic mortality: Durham Priory, 1395–1529’, Economic History
Review, LIX (2006), pp. 667–87.
Healey, J., ‘Socially selective mortality during the population crisis of 1727–1730: evidence from Lancashire’,
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Hindle, S., On the parish?: the micro-politics of poor relief in rural England c. 1550–1750 (Oxford, 2004).
Hindle, S., ‘Dearth and the English revolution: the harvest crisis of 1647–50’, Economic History Review, 61, S1
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1 (1964), pp. 28–46.
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Leonard, E. M., The early history of English poor relief (Cambridge, 1900).
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pp. 31–43.
Nicolini, E. A., ‘Was Malthus right? AVAR analysis of economic and demographic interactions in pre-industrial
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Nightingale, P., ‘Some new evidence of crises and trends of mortality in late medieval England’, Past and Present,
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Ó Gráda, C., ‘Making famine history’, Journal of Economic Literature, XLV (2007), pp. 5–38.
O’Brien, P. K., ‘The political economy of British taxation, 1660–1815’, Economic History Review, 2nd ser., LXI
(1988), pp. 1–32.
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2nd ser., XXIX (1976), pp. 14–37.
Postan, M. M. and Titow, J., ‘Heriots and prices on Winchester manors’, Economic History Review, 2nd ser., XI
(1959), pp. 392–411.
Razi, Z., Life, marriage and death in a medieval parish: economy, society and demography in Halesowen 1270–1400
(Cambridge, 1980).
Razzell, P., Population and disease: transforming English society, 1550–1850 (2007).
Razzell, P. and Spence, C., ‘The hazards of wealth: adult mortality in pre-twentieth-century England’, Social
History of Medicine, 19 (2006), pp. 381–405.
Rosenthal, J. T., ‘Mediaeval longevity: and the secular peerage, 1350–1500’, Population Studies, 27 (1973),
pp. 287–93.
Rushton, N. S. and Sigle-Rushton, W., ‘Monastic poor relief in sixteenth-century England’, Journal of Interdisciplinary
History, XXXII (2001), pp. 193–216.
Schofield, R., Parish register aggregate analyses: the Population History of England database and introductory guide
(Colchester, 1998).
Sen, A., Poverty and famines: an essay on entitlement and deprivation (Oxford, 1981).
Slack, P., Poverty and policy in Tudor and Stuart England (1989).
Solar, P. M., ‘Poor relief and English economic development before the industrial revolution’, Economic History
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Titow, J. Z., English rural society 1200–1350 (1969).
Walter, J., ‘The social economy of dearth in early modern England’, in J. Walter and R. Schofield, eds., Famine,
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Just post up the extracts, that'll be fine thanks.