具体描述
This book is based on a detailed study of the court records of the county of Denbighshire in north-east Wales, focusing on the period from 1660 to 1730. The sheer scale of surviving early modern court archives attests to the importance of the institutions that produced them, and they have since the 1970s become major sources for a wide range of early modernists - not simply specialists in the history of crime. The functioning of much government and administration depended heavily on legal institutions and their officers; governance and criminal justice, in turn, depended heavily on broad participation beyond the sparse ranks of officials. It is then a fundamental, fascinating paradox of the records of crime and the courts that they can illuminate both order and disorder, law-keepers and law-breakers, the respectable and the unruly. They can show authority as both powerful and precarious; they reveal the divisions and inequalities as well as the shared experiences and attitudes within local communities.
The Loom and the Ledger: Commerce, Craft, and Community in Georgian Bristol A Deep Dive into the Economic and Social Fabric of a Thriving Port City This exhaustive volume navigates the intricate tapestry of Georgian Bristol, moving beyond the familiar narratives of transatlantic trade to illuminate the localized dynamics that underpinned this bustling urban center. The Loom and the Ledger offers a meticulous examination of the interconnected worlds of commodity production, mercantile practice, and the evolving social structures within a rapidly expanding British port between the years 1714 and 1830. Rejecting a singular focus on grand maritime ventures, the book grounds its analysis in the material realities of the workshops, counting houses, and bustling dockside exchanges that defined daily life and economic stability. The opening sections establish the demographic and spatial context. Drawing upon parish records, apprenticeship indentures, and detailed property assessments, the author reconstructs the physical expansion of Bristol—the rapid development of neighborhoods like Hotwells and the creeping industrialization along the Avon. Crucially, the work charts the internal migration patterns, detailing how successive waves of migrants, from the surrounding Welsh Marches and the West Country hinterlands, were absorbed (or excluded) by the existing social hierarchies of freemen and established guilds. This is not merely a demographic summary, but a study in urban pressure and adaptation, demonstrating how population growth stressed existing infrastructure, particularly sanitation and the supply of staple foodstuffs like bread and coal. A central pillar of the research is dedicated to the manufacturing base that fueled Bristol’s prosperity, independent of the sugar refineries and slave-trade nexus often emphasized in broader histories. The book offers an unparalleled look into the Bristol pottery industry, charting the shift from simple earthenware to refined porcelain production, analyzing the adoption of new firing techniques, and detailing the complex supply chains required for sourcing specialized clays and pigments. Through surviving business ledgers and correspondence between master potters and their agents in Staffordshire and London, the narrative traces the fierce competition and the delicate balancing act required to maintain a niche market presence against larger industrial centers. Similarly, the book delves into the less-publicized but equally vital textile finishing trades—dyeing, bleaching, and cloth dressing—exploring the specific labor regimes implemented in these workshops, often characterized by highly seasonal work patterns and the employment of significant numbers of women and juvenile laborers. The concept of ‘credit’ is radically re-examined. Rather than treating credit as a simple monetary transaction, the author explores it as a system of social obligation and reputation. Based on the records of local notaries and the proceedings of minor courts dealing with debt recovery, the work illustrates the complex web of informal financing that supported small-scale artisans and retail merchants. These chapters reveal how trust—or the sudden, catastrophic loss thereof—could make or break a family business long before bankruptcy proceedings were formalized. The nuanced relationship between the established Bank of England notes and the proliferation of local bank notes and bills of exchange provides a granular understanding of how capital circulated at the street level. The role of the artisan and the ‘middling sort’ receives significant attention. The book meticulously documents the evolution of trade guilds—not as monolithic entities resisting change, but as active agents attempting to legislate quality control and maintain exclusivity in the face of burgeoning capitalist competition. By analyzing guild meeting minutes, the author unpacks internal disputes over apprenticeships, the policing of product quality (from the fineness of woolen thread to the measurement of ale), and the political maneuvering undertaken to secure favorable access to the burgeoning municipal contracts offered by the Corporation. This section provides a corrective to narratives that view all pre-industrial labor solely through the lens of master-servant dichotomy, showing instead the emergence of a self-conscious stratum of skilled workers who sought to protect their economic autonomy through collective regulation. Furthermore, The Loom and the Ledger casts a bright light on the intricate logistics of local provisioning. The operation of the Great Market is mapped out in detail—who sold what, where they came from, and the mechanisms used to enforce market discipline. The book examines the complex politics surrounding the provision of hay and fodder for the city’s vast network of draft animals (essential for hauling goods from the quay to the warehouse), revealing the vested interests that often controlled these critical inputs. The narrative also traces the development of retail specialization, showing how the growth of dedicated ironmongers, stationers, and chandlers signaled a move away from the general store model, reflecting increasing disposable income among certain segments of the population and greater complexity in consumer demand. Finally, the volume concludes by assessing the impact of national economic shifts on this local structure. The Napoleonic Wars, for instance, are shown not just as a distant conflict affecting imports, but as a direct cause of fluctuating grain prices that inflamed social tensions in Bristol’s working-class districts, leading to specific, localized disturbances documented in contemporary pamphlets and magistrates’ reports. The book effectively argues that Georgian Bristol’s success was predicated not just on its access to global resources, but on the density, regulatory mechanisms, and competitive dynamism of its internal commercial and artisanal sectors. It is an essential corrective, shifting the focus from the macro-history of empire to the micro-histories of ledger entries, workshop floors, and the persistent effort required to turn raw material into marketable wealth.