Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- TO MY PARENTS
- Preface
- Part I Servants and labourers
- Part II Form and practice
- Part III Change
- Appendix 1 ‘Servants’ and ‘labourers’ in early modern English
- Appendix 2 Age and sex
- Appendix 3 Legal control of mobility
- Appendix 4 Statute Sessions and hiring fairs in England, sixteenth to nineteenth centuries
- Appendix 5 The Holland, Lincolnshire, Statute Sessions
- Appendix 6 Compulsory service
- Appendix 7 Speculations on the origin of the institution
- Appendix 8 The 1831 census
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Appendix 2 - Age and sex
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- TO MY PARENTS
- Preface
- Part I Servants and labourers
- Part II Form and practice
- Part III Change
- Appendix 1 ‘Servants’ and ‘labourers’ in early modern English
- Appendix 2 Age and sex
- Appendix 3 Legal control of mobility
- Appendix 4 Statute Sessions and hiring fairs in England, sixteenth to nineteenth centuries
- Appendix 5 The Holland, Lincolnshire, Statute Sessions
- Appendix 6 Compulsory service
- Appendix 7 Speculations on the origin of the institution
- Appendix 8 The 1831 census
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Correcting for age and sex to produce a uniform measure of the composition of the labour force is possible, but requires so many assumptions about the samples that would be subjected to these corrections that it was decided to present the uncorrected totals.
The standard method involves, first, constructing a series of deflators to convert women's labour, children's labour, etc., into men's labour. Cho and Gill have done this in their studies of South Korea and India, using the wages of women and children relative to those of men as the deflators. But early modern wage data are scarce, and usually intractable. Wages actually paid to individuals can be gathered from a few account books, from presentments at Quarter Sessions, and from settlement examinations, but unless we know the age of the servant or labourer receiving these wages, we cannot know which were the wages of adults and which were those of children, and we are back where we started. Wage assessments made at Quarter Sessions are no guide.
They are highly formalized, never more so than in the wages assigned to men and women. In none of the assessments examined were the wages of the meanest man servant lower than those of the most important woman servant. Men and women were assigned tasks according to their sex, and wages were thus paid on the basis of sex.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Servants in Husbandry in Early Modern England , pp. 143 - 147Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1981