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Land and Debt: On the Process of Social Differentiation in Rural Sweden, circa 1750–18501

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 October 2008

Maria Ågren
Affiliation:
History Department, University of Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden.

Extract

When writing his final report in 1823 on the current state of affairs in the county of Kopparberg in Sweden, its governor, Hans Järta, made a short digression to ponder upon the differences between England and Sweden. According to Järta, England had been unfortunate in that it had deprived a large proportion of its rural population of the land on which they could otherwise have supported themselves. They had now, Järta remarked, no other choice but to work in the factories, and were the first to suffer when these had to close down. In some parts of Sweden, efforts were at this time being made to organise agricultural production in accordance with similar ideas, that is, through the use of wage labour. Järta was deeply sceptical about these experiments however, claiming that they led to nothing but poverty and social problems.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994

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References

2. What Järta had in mind was probably the so-called statarsystem. See Eriksson, I. and Rogers, J., Rural Labor and Population Change. Social and Demographic Developments in East-Central Sweden during the Nineteenth Century (Uppsala, 1978).Google Scholar

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21. Cf. Dahlgren, S., ‘Karl XI’ in Kungar och krigare [Kings and Warriors] (Stockholm, 1992).Google Scholar

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25. Letter from Charles XI, 15 October 1684; quoted and translated from M. Ågren, op. cit., p 45.

26. M. Ågren, op. cit., p 59ff.

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31. When not indicated otherwise, the whole section is built upon results presented and discussed in my thesis (M. Ågren, op. cit.).

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33. C. G. A. Clay, op. cit. pp. 99ff.

34. 10 skeppund = c. 1.5 tons.

35. When discussing eighteenth-century criminal statistics, Douglas Hay has argued that the figures pertaining to theft cannot reasonably be influenced by any enforcement waves, since such crimes were not prosecuted by state representatives. He thus seems to define an enforcement wave as something which results solely from the controlling and enforcing activities of the state. It seems to me that this is making the concept unduly narrow. (Hay, D., ‘War, Dearth and Theft in the Eighteenth Century: The Record of the English Courts’ in Past and Present 1982:95Google Scholar).

36. 1 tunnland = c. 5,000 m2

37. Ågren, M., ‘Att lösa ekonomiska tvister — domstolarnas främsta sysselsättning på 1700-talet?’ [Settling disputes — the Principal Occupation of the Courts in the Eighteenth Century?] in Svensk Historisk Tidskrift, 1988:4.Google Scholar

38. Cf. Sjöberg, M. Taussi, ‘Tinget sam social arena’ [The court as social arena] in Historia Nu ed. Brändström, A. et al. , (Umeå, 1988)Google Scholar; Sundin, J., För Gud, staten och folket [Crime and Local Justice in Pre-Industrial Sweden] (Stockholm, 1992).Google Scholar

39. Contrary to what happened in other Swedish counties, the reform was not proposed by the local population but by the governor. Because of its alleged poverty, the peasantry was given ample state funding to cover the expenses related to the reform (M. Ågren, op. cit., pp. 177f).

40. It should be noticed that the Swedish word for ‘enclosure’ — skifte — means exchange, which is not incidental. A presentation of the Swedish ‘enclosure movement’ is given by S. Helmfrid in ‘The Storskifte, Enskifte and Laga Skifte in Sweden. General Features’ in Geografiska Annaler, 1960.

41. M. Ågren, op. cit., pp. 212ff.

42. M. Isacson, op. cit., pp. 82, 180.

43. Cf. note 17.

44. S. Carlsson, op. cit., pp. 64f.

45. Hobsbawm, E., The Age of Revolution: Europe 1789–1848 (London, 1962) p. 149.Google Scholar

46. C. G. A. Clay, op. cit., pp. 68, 71, 75.

47. Ibid. pp. 85ff.

48. J. M. Neeson, op. cit.

49. Cf. Winberg, C., ‘Another route to modern society: The advancement of the Swedish peasantry’ in Agrarian Society in History: Essays in Honour of Magnus Mörner, ed. Lundahl, M. and Svensson, T. (London, New York, 1990).Google Scholar