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The disposal of crown lands and the Devon land market, 1536-58

Agricultural History Review, (1970), 18(1), pp.93-105.

by

John Kew

Prepared by Michael Steer

The author asserts that one result of the preoccupation of historians with the disposal of monastic lands has been a tendency to minimize the size of the land market before 1536. His aim in the article is to attempt another approach, namely the consideration of the total land market in a single county during the period of maximum social upheaval which immediately followed the dissolution of the monasteries. He attempts to put the market for monastic and other Crown lands, generally in Devon, into perspective, and suggests that this was only a part, albeit a very important part, of a much wider land market. This article can be downloaded from British Agricultural History Society’s website

 
 Page
Adams, Nicholas102
Aylmer, G E99
Baker, Dennis105
Bonville97
Carew-Pole95
Cary95
Cooper, J P103
Cornwall, J103
Cornwallis, Sir Thomas96
Courtenay97
Cowper, J W102
Crowley, R102
Crudge, John105
Denys, Sir Thomas102
Devon, Earl of95
Donnelly, Tom105
Dudley, Sir John96
Exeter, Marquess of96-7
Finch, M E93
Fisher, F J102
Fortescue102
French, R A105
Fulford, Sir John102
Gould, J D96
Habakkuk, Professor H J94, 96, 99-100
Henry VIII94, 98
Hexter, J H93
Hooker, John99
Hoskins, Professor W G99, 103
Kew, John E96, 102, 105
Lewis, G R99
Lysons, D104
Mary, Queen98
Philip & Mary98
Pollard, Sir Lewis96
Reichel, O J104
Rolle, George96, 102
Simpson, A W B94
Southcott, John100
Stone, L94, 103
Suffolk, Duke of97
Willoughby, John99
Wilson, Thomas102
Youings, Dr J A93, 96, 102-3