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Businessmen and land ownership in the late nineteenth century

Tom Nicholas

Volume 52, Issue 1

Abstract

This article analyses the proportions of personal to real estate wealth for a group of 295 businessmen profiled in the Dictionary of business biography. It shows that businessmen who owned land on a large scale in the late nineteenth century were a comparatively small group who retained a small proportion of their total wealth in landed assets. Low levels of social mobility are identified as a function of land purchase, and new insights are given into the relationship between wealth, status, and land ownership. Any integration of business and landed wealth in this period was not a consequence of businessmen becoming landowners.


Article Type: OA
Page range: 27 - 44
Extent: 0 Page(s)

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