Gender, property and household in provincial English parish government, c. 1540-1660

<p>The political structure of early modern England was, definitively, patriarchal. And yet, women wielded direct authority on the local level in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries at a scale not seen in the periods before or after. While historians have long recognised that early modern p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Blackwood, A
Other Authors: Gunn, S
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
_version_ 1797109502263164928
author Blackwood, A
author2 Gunn, S
author_facet Gunn, S
Blackwood, A
author_sort Blackwood, A
collection OXFORD
description <p>The political structure of early modern England was, definitively, patriarchal. And yet, women wielded direct authority on the local level in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries at a scale not seen in the periods before or after. While historians have long recognised that early modern parishes occasionally elected female officers, this thesis is the first full-length study of female office-holding in the rural parish. As such, it reveals that we have underestimated the frequency of female nomination to parish office throughout this period, requiring a reevaluation of current historical knowledge on custom, state formation, gender relations and the nature of parish government.</p> <p>This thesis begins with a simple question: why were women chosen, and why were they chosen more often in some parishes than in others? By mapping female office-holding over time and space, we find that the nomination of women was firmly linked to specific local customs of election which privileged landholding. Examined intersectionally, instances of female nomination allow us to deepen our understanding of these electoral customs, why they were developed and the extent of their authority. First, we consider why householding and landholding might come before gender in considerations of eligibility for parish office, concluding that office-holding was a liability attached to the land, regardless of who held it. Property-based customs of election, it is argued, developed as a way of spreading financial risk among substantial tenements, which provided security to parish transactions. Finally, patterns of nomination and deputyship in the seventeenth century suggest that these customs were carefully preserved, even as they came to have less bearing on who carried out the duties of the office. Thus, the nomination of women to parish office in early modern England was, more than anything else, a byproduct of their neighbours' ongoing dedication to custom.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-07T07:42:42Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:96f37f3a-25a2-4350-952e-dab5230385fe
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T07:42:42Z
publishDate 2022
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:96f37f3a-25a2-4350-952e-dab5230385fe2023-05-09T08:58:09ZGender, property and household in provincial English parish government, c. 1540-1660Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:96f37f3a-25a2-4350-952e-dab5230385feHistory--17th centuryHistory, LocalWest Country (England)Customs and practicesPolitics and governmentHistory--16th centuryEarly modern, 1500-1700Local electionsSocial life and customs--17th centuryPolitics and government--17th centuryChurchwardens' accounts16th centuryParish councils (Local government)Seventeenth centuryParish councilsSixteenth century17th centuryPolitics and government--16th centuryParish electionsSocial conditions--16th centuryHistoryLocal historyEnglishHyrax Deposit2022Blackwood, AGunn, SIngram, M<p>The political structure of early modern England was, definitively, patriarchal. And yet, women wielded direct authority on the local level in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries at a scale not seen in the periods before or after. While historians have long recognised that early modern parishes occasionally elected female officers, this thesis is the first full-length study of female office-holding in the rural parish. As such, it reveals that we have underestimated the frequency of female nomination to parish office throughout this period, requiring a reevaluation of current historical knowledge on custom, state formation, gender relations and the nature of parish government.</p> <p>This thesis begins with a simple question: why were women chosen, and why were they chosen more often in some parishes than in others? By mapping female office-holding over time and space, we find that the nomination of women was firmly linked to specific local customs of election which privileged landholding. Examined intersectionally, instances of female nomination allow us to deepen our understanding of these electoral customs, why they were developed and the extent of their authority. First, we consider why householding and landholding might come before gender in considerations of eligibility for parish office, concluding that office-holding was a liability attached to the land, regardless of who held it. Property-based customs of election, it is argued, developed as a way of spreading financial risk among substantial tenements, which provided security to parish transactions. Finally, patterns of nomination and deputyship in the seventeenth century suggest that these customs were carefully preserved, even as they came to have less bearing on who carried out the duties of the office. Thus, the nomination of women to parish office in early modern England was, more than anything else, a byproduct of their neighbours' ongoing dedication to custom.</p>
spellingShingle History--17th century
History, Local
West Country (England)
Customs and practices
Politics and government
History--16th century
Early modern, 1500-1700
Local elections
Social life and customs--17th century
Politics and government--17th century
Churchwardens' accounts
16th century
Parish councils (Local government)
Seventeenth century
Parish councils
Sixteenth century
17th century
Politics and government--16th century
Parish elections
Social conditions--16th century
History
Local history
Blackwood, A
Gender, property and household in provincial English parish government, c. 1540-1660
title Gender, property and household in provincial English parish government, c. 1540-1660
title_full Gender, property and household in provincial English parish government, c. 1540-1660
title_fullStr Gender, property and household in provincial English parish government, c. 1540-1660
title_full_unstemmed Gender, property and household in provincial English parish government, c. 1540-1660
title_short Gender, property and household in provincial English parish government, c. 1540-1660
title_sort gender property and household in provincial english parish government c 1540 1660
topic History--17th century
History, Local
West Country (England)
Customs and practices
Politics and government
History--16th century
Early modern, 1500-1700
Local elections
Social life and customs--17th century
Politics and government--17th century
Churchwardens' accounts
16th century
Parish councils (Local government)
Seventeenth century
Parish councils
Sixteenth century
17th century
Politics and government--16th century
Parish elections
Social conditions--16th century
History
Local history
work_keys_str_mv AT blackwooda genderpropertyandhouseholdinprovincialenglishparishgovernmentc15401660