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Silent Partners restores women to their place in the story of
England's Financial Revolution. Women were active participants in
London's first stock market beginning in the 1690s and continuing
through the eighteenth century. Whether playing the state lottery,
investing in government funds for retirement, or speculating in
company stocks, women regularly comprised between a fifth and a
third of public investors. These female investors ranged from
London servants to middling tradeswomen, up to provincial
gentlewomen and peeresses of the realm. Amy Froide finds that there
was no single female investor type, rather some women ran risks and
speculated in stocks while others sought out low-risk, low-return
options for their retirement years. Not only did women invest for
themselves, their financial knowledge and ability meant that family
members often relied on wives, sisters, and aunts to act as their
investing agents. Moreover, women's investing not only benefitted
themselves and their families, it also aided the nation. Women's
capital was a critical component of Britain's rise to economic,
military, and colonial dominance in the eighteenth century.
Focusing on the period between 1690 and 1750, and utilizing women's
account books and financial correspondence, as well as the records
of joint stock companies, the Bank of England, and the Exchequer,
Silent Partners provides the first comprehensive overview of the
significant role women played in the birth of financial capitalism
in Britain.
This engaging book provides a gateway to larger themes in modern
British history through a set of fascinating portraits of
individuals that explore important events and movements from the
perspective of the people involved. Political developments are
illuminated through chapters on John Locke, Charles Townshend,
popular radicalism, and Margaret Thatcher. Religion and education
are considered through essays on evangelicalism, the Oxford
Movement, Charles Bradlaugh, and Sir James Kay Shuttleworth.
Industrial and imperial questions are explored through pieces on
the Great Exhibition, the Indian Rebellion of 1857, and
post-colonial Nigeria. National identity and wartime experience
come to life in the lives of G. K. Chesterton and of Barbara Nixon,
an Airraid Warden during the Blitz. Many of the chapters examine
the experiences of women, including single women in early modern
England, suffragettes, and Irish nationalist Mary Butler. As a rich
and humanized approach to history, this book offers readers a
deeper understanding of key facets of British life in the early
modern and modern periods.
This engaging book provides a gateway to larger themes in modern
British history through a set of fascinating portraits of
individuals that explore important events and movements from the
perspective of the people involved. Political developments are
illuminated through chapters on John Locke, Charles Townshend,
popular radicalism, and Margaret Thatcher. Religion and education
are considered through essays on evangelicalism, the Oxford
Movement, Charles Bradlaugh, and Sir James Kay Shuttleworth.
Industrial and imperial questions are explored through pieces on
the Great Exhibition, the Indian Rebellion of 1857, and
post-colonial Nigeria. National identity and wartime experience
come to life in the lives of G. K. Chesterton and of Barbara Nixon,
an Airraid Warden during the Blitz. Many of the chapters examine
the experiences of women, including single women in early modern
England, suffragettes, and Irish nationalist Mary Butler. As a rich
and humanized approach to history, this book offers readers a
deeper understanding of key facets of British life in the early
modern and modern periods.
Never Married: Singlewomen in Early Modern England investigates a
paradox in the history of early modern England: although one third
of adult women were never married, these women have remained
largely absent from historical scholarship. Amy Froide reintroduces
us to the category of difference called marital status and to the
significant ways it shaped the life experiences of early modern
women. By de-centring marriage as the norm in social, economic, and
cultural terms, her book critically refines our current
understanding of people's lives in the past and adds to a recent
line of scholarship that questions just how common "traditional"
families really were.
This book is both a social-economic study of singlewomen and a
cultural study of the meanings of singleness in early modern
England. It focuses on never-married women in England's provincial
towns, and on singlewomen from a broad social spectrum. Covering
the entire early modern era, it reveals that this was a time of
transition in the history of never-married women. During the
sixteenth century life-long singlewomen were largely absent from
popular culture, but by the eighteenth century they had become a
central concern of English society.
As the first book of original research to focus on singlewomen on
the period, it also illuminates other areas of early modern
history. Froide reveals the importance of kinship in the past to
women without husbands and children, as well as to widows,
widowers, single men, and orphans. Examining the contributions of
working and propertied singlewomen, she is able to illustrate the
importance of gender and marital status to urban economies and to
notions of urban citizenship in the earlymodern era. Tracing the
origins of the spinster and old maid stereotypes she reveals how
singlewomen were marginalized as first the victims and then the
villains of Protestant English society.
Never Married: Singlewomen in Early Modern England investigates a
paradox in the history of early modern England: although one third
of adult women were never married, these women have remained
largely absent from historical scholarship. Amy Froide reintroduces
us to the category of difference called marital status and to the
significant ways it shaped the life experiences of early modern
women. By de-centring marriage as the norm in social, economic, and
cultural terms, her book critically refines our current
understanding of people's lives in the past and adds to a recent
line of scholarship that questions just how common 'traditional'
families really were. This book is both a social-economic study of
singlewomen and a cultural study of the meanings of singleness in
early modern England. It focuses on never-married women in
England's provincial towns, and on singlewomen from a broad social
spectrum. Covering the entire early modern era, it reveals that
this was a time of transition in the history of never-married
women. During the sixteenth century life-long singlewomen were
largely absent from popular culture, but by the eighteenth century
they had become a central concern of English society. As the first
book of original research to focus on singlewomen on the period, it
also illuminates other areas of early modern history. Froide
reveals the importance of kinship in the past to women without
husbands and children, as well as to widows, widowers, single men,
and orphans. Examining the contributions of working and propertied
singlewomen, she is able to illustrate the importance of gender and
marital status to urban economies and to notions of urban
citizenship in the early modern era. Tracing the origins of the
spinster and old maid stereotypes she reveals how singlewomen were
marginalized as first the victims and then the villains of
Protestant English society.
When we think about the European past, we tend to imagine villages,
towns, and cities populated by conventional families-married
couples and their children. Although most people did marry and pass
many of their adult years in the company of a spouse, this vision
of a preindustrial Europe shaped by heterosexual marriage
deceptively hides the well-established fact that, in some times and
places, as many as twenty-five percent of women and men remained
single throughout their lives. Despite the significant number of
never-married lay women in medieval and early modern Europe, the
study of their role and position in that society has been largely
neglected. Singlewomen in the European Past opens up this group for
further investigation. It is not only the first book to highlight
the important minority of women who never married but also the
first to address the critical matter of differences among women
from the perspective of marital status. Essays by leading
scholars-among them Maryanne Kowaleski, Margaret Hunt, Ruth Mazo
Karras, Susan Mosher Stuard, Roberta Krueger, and Merry
Wiesner-deal with topics including the sexual and emotional
relationships of singlewomen, the economic issues and employment
opportunities facing them, the differences between the lives of
widows and singlewomen, the conflation of singlewomen and
prostitutes, and the problem of female slavery. The chapters both
illustrate the roles open to the singlewoman in the thirteenth
through eighteenth centuries and raise new perspectives about the
experiences of singlewomen in earlier times.
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