Forgot your Password? | Register

Urban population in late medieval England: the evidence of the lay subsidies

STEPHEN H. RIGBY

Volume 63, Issue 2

Abstract

Was there a growth in the proportion of the population living in England's towns in the later middle ages? Uncertainty about national population trends and about the taxation multipliers needed to arrive at population totals has made it difficult to answer this question. A direct comparison of the proportion of taxpayers that was urban in 1377 and 1524 suggests that the urban share of population was static or may even have declined in this period. However, such decline provides no simple index of urban prosperity or decay: a decline in urbanization could be the product of rural buoyancy rather than of urban recession.


Article Type: OA
Page range: 393 - 417
Extent: Page(s)

View Article

Join us

Membership information for the Economic History Society

Click here for more information

Forthcoming Events

Join us at the next EHS conference

Click here for more information