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The State of the Poor 3 Volume Set : Or, An History of the Labouring Classes in England, from the Conquest to the Present Period

Part of the Cambridge Library Collection - British and Irish History, General series
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Sir Frederick Morton Eden (1766-1809) was an English writer and a pioneer social researcher.

Eden studied at Christ Church, Oxford, and subsequently worked in banking and insurance, inheriting a baronetcy from his father, who had been the governor of the American province of Maryland, in 1784.

Arguing that poverty could not be tackled without knowing what it actually meant to be poor, this innovative three-volume work is an attempt to define what poverty meant in concrete terms.

The work is packed with data from across England, divided by county, and covering factors such as food prices, wages, diet and mortality rates.

It begins with an explanation of the methods of data collection used, and outlines the various measures taken against poverty at different periods.

Scotland is considered in an appendix.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1108036902 / 9781108036900
Mixed media product
27/09/2011
United Kingdom
2044 pages
211 x 297 mm, 4990 grams
Professional & Vocational Learn More