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Unravels the financial story of the Marquis of Anglesey's estates in Dorset and Somerset Creates an understanding of the complexities of estate finances and administration and explores the role of the estate manager Examines the ways in which the estate sought to impose social control through the spending of monies on items such as education, paying voting incentives and the negotiating of rental agreements Explores how the estate formed part of an economy of expedience through the setting up of local industries, charitable payments to the poor, food, clothing and coal allowances

Produktbeschreibung
Unravels the financial story of the Marquis of Anglesey's estates in Dorset and Somerset
Creates an understanding of the complexities of estate finances and administration and explores the role of the estate manager
Examines the ways in which the estate sought to impose social control through the spending of monies on items such as education, paying voting incentives and the negotiating of rental agreements
Explores how the estate formed part of an economy of expedience through the setting up of local industries, charitable payments to the poor, food, clothing and coal allowances

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Autorenporträt
Carol Beardmore holds Research Fellowships at the University of Leicester, UK and part-time lectureships at De Montfort University, UK, and the Open University, UK. Dr. Beardmore has had articles published in Rural History and Family and Community History and chapters in The Land Agent in Britain: Past, Present and Future (2016), Living the Family: A Study of Family Life, c.1650-1900 (2019) and Disability Matters (2018).

Rezensionen
"The resulting volume is not only a delight to read but provides real insight into the way that a heterogeneous late-Hanoverian/Victorian country estate could be effectively managed against a highly fluid social, financial and political landscape. ... this volume will appeal across the board, from enthusiastic amateurs to serious scholars of rural history, social relations and the landed aristocracy. ... it breaks genuinely new ground." (Peter Jones, Family & Community History, Vol. 22 (3), October, 2019)