Thursday, June 15, 2023

A Liberal Dose, June 15, 2023 "Dispossessing the Poor, Part 2 -Building Fences"

 





A Liberal Dose

June 15, 2023

Troy D. Smith

“Dispossessing the Poor, Part 2- Building Fences”

[note- this is part of a series. Previous installments are linked below]

link to PART 1

 

Last week we talked about feudalism and the commons in Europe, and how things started to change in the 16th century. Discovery of the New World had opened up global trading, which made money much more important than it had previously been. Oh, there had always been trade, and money had been around for millennia. But money was not what conferred power in the Middle Ages, it was the control of land. Many nobles were “land rich and cash poor” and it didn’t matter much. For simple farmers, you might come across some money now and then, and use it, but mostly you worked the land and were self-sufficient. You grew what you needed, supplemented by hunting and fishing in the commons (which were owned by everybody) and by trading items here and there with neighbors. The whole society didn’t RUN on money.

Two things happened to change that after the Plague. First, English wool was in high demand in Europe. Lords who were not receiving much real income from the land in their tenure decided that raising more sheep on that land WOULD bring income, and in the form of money which was becoming easier to use (“money travels”- you can use it in other places and it will not go bad while it is getting there.) Therefore, in the mid-1500s, English nobles started practicing “enclosure” -which is just what it sounds like. Fences and walls. Usually in the form of stone walls, these enclosures were built on the commons. Much woodland was leveled to make room for sheep pasturage. Fencing off these areas meant they no longer belonged to everyone- they belonged solely to the noble. Peasants were cut off from them. We established last week that peasants could not survive simply on what they could farm for their noble liege (as much of it was taken from them). Now, if they followed their previous practices, they would be arrested or hung as poachers. As a result, many of them moved away from the village farms and into cities, hoping to find jobs, which most did not. By the late 1500s cities -especially London -were teeming with poor, unemployed, landless people. Those who remained on farms had a very difficult time of it, and certainly had lost any vestige of leverage they may once have had.

Here’s the second thing. Over time, European elites, philosophers, and merchants began to associate a free flow of money as evidence a society had left savagery and entered modern civilization. By the 1700s, this was associated with urban living and the factory system. Labor must be specialized, Adam Smith argued, not broad. If there are 18 steps to making a pin, with a different worker trained specifically for each step, many more pins enter the market and more money is made -for the owner of the pin factory and for the workers. More money is thus injected into the system, benefitting everyone. Well, almost everyone. It is not good, Smith argued, for one person to have a BUNCH of skills… like a farmer has to have. Because they are self-sufficient, not making much money yet still getting by -they are not contributing to “society” in the form of the economy. Yet we need farmers… but do we, really? Other thinkers of the time stressed that we need FARMS, but not farmers… if those farms can be corporatized and workers hired, that’s much better. In short, people who were not maximizing their land and making it a commodity, and who were only producing enough for themselves, were a burden on society even if they took nothing from that society. Poor = bad. Intentionally poor, due to not trying to get rich and being content with getting by… that, in the eyes of the upper crust, was downright wicked.

These attitudes about simple farmers and poor workers were about to travel across the ocean.

 

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

 

You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE

 


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