Usury legislation, cash, and credit: the development of the female investor in the late Tudor and Stuart periods
Judith Spicksley
Abstract
This article uses testamentary evidence from Lincoln diocesan court between the 1570s and the 1690s to examine links between inheritance, a rise in money-lending amongst single women, and an increase in the proportion of women that never married. Two trends emerge: first, more fathers after the 1570s chose to bequeath cash to their daughters; second, they were more likely to restrict access to this portion by age rather than marriage. Assisted by a softening of attitudes towards interest-bearing lending, these changes offered some single women a measure of financial independence that may have impacted on their marriage decisions.
Article Type: OA
Page range: 277 - 301
Extent: 25 Page(s)
