chapter 1 Introduction -- chapter 2 Women, land and property -- chapter 3 Managing the estate -- chapter 4 Improving the estate -- chapter 5 Country houses, gardens and estate villages -- chapter 6 Representing women and property -- chapter 7 Beyond the (park) pale.
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This chapter explores the relations between women, land, property and the law. The first part of the chapter outlines single, widowed and married women's legal position as property owners, paying particular attention to the doctrines of primogeniture and coverture and their impact on women's property rights. It explores the circumstances by which women most commonly became landowners, outlining the four main routes to landownership for women, as well as the practices by which married women were sometimes able to circumvent the restrictions of coverture. As a corollary to this, it also explores the impact of various changes to the early modern legal system – including the shift from dower to jointure arrangements, the emergence of strict settlement and the declining power of the ecclesiastical courts – on women's property rights. The second half of the chapter sets out to assess the significance of women as a class of landowners in Georgian England, quantifying the scale of women's landholding in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries using a large sample of data drawn from the parliamentary enclosure awards. In doing so, it responds to considerable uncertainty about the scale of women's property ownership. Little quantitative information is available on the proportion of land owned by women, although a handful of studies have used rentals and leases to examine female landholding – as opposed to landownership – within small groups of manors. The results of the sampled enclosure awards are presented below, comparisons between this data and the earlier, smaller studies explored, and the new data used to throw light on four key issues: the legal and marital status of female landowners, the scale of individual female landowners' holdings, the geography of female landownership and the thorny issue of change over time.
Using material drawn from across eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century England, this chapter charts single, widowed and married women's contribution to estate management. It explores women's role in the financial management of landed estates as well as other more 'hands on' aspects of estate management, including setting and collecting rents, negotiating with tenants about rent, tenancies and repairs, supervising home farms, managing timber resources and otherwise determining estate policy
Women like Jane Ashley, Amabel Hume-Campbell, Anna Maria Agar, Sarah Dawes and Mary Cotterel were all involved in pushing through parliamentary enclosure awards, while Elizabeth Prowse introduced wide-ranging agricultural improvements after the informal enclosure of the open fields at Wicken. The contributions of these women and others like them to a bundle of related practices – including parliamentary enclosure and agricultural improvement, but also non-agricultural sources of estate income – are discussed in this chapter.