
Managing for Posterity
The Norfolk Gentry and Their Estates C.1450-1700
Elizabeth Griffiths(Author)
Jane Whittle(Editor)
University of Hertfordshire Press
Published on 1. September 2022
Book
Paperback/Softback
256 pages
978-1-912260-45-4 (ISBN)
Description
Securing the long-term survival and status of the family has always been the principal concern of the English aristocracy and gentry. Central to that ambition has been the successful management of their landed estates, whilst failure in this regard could spell ruination for an entire family. In the sixteenth century, the task became more difficult as price inflation reduced the value of rents; improved management skills were called for. In Norfolk, estates began to change hands rapidly as the unaware or simply incompetent failed to grasp the issues, while the more astute and enterprising landowners capitalised on their neighbours' misfortunes.
When Sir Hamon Le Strange inherited his family's ancient estate at Hunstanton in 1604 it was much depleted and heavily encumbered. The outlook was bleak: such circumstances often led to the disappearance of families as landowners. However, within a generation, he and his remarkable wife Alice had modernised the estate and secured the family's future. After 700 years, the Le Stranges still survive and prosper on their estate at Hunstanton, making them the longest surviving gentry family in Norfolk. The first part of this book presents new research into the secret of their rare success. A key aspect of their strategy was a belief in the power (and economic value) of knowledge: Hamon and Alice wanted to ensure that their improvements would endure for posterity. To this end, they curated their knowledge through meticulous record-keeping and carefully handed it down to their successors. This behaviour, instilled in the family, not only facilitated on-going reforms, but helped future generations overcome the inevitable reversals and challenges they also faced.
The second part of the book collects together four related papers from Elizabeth Griffiths' research about the Le Stranges, Hobarts and Wyndhams, republished from the Agricultural History Review and edited from two Norfolk Record Society volumes. For anyone interested in early modern rural society and agriculture and the history of Norfolk gentry estates, this volume will be essential reading, offering as it does new perspectives on the history of estate management, notably the role of women, the relationship with local communities and sustainability in agriculture.
When Sir Hamon Le Strange inherited his family's ancient estate at Hunstanton in 1604 it was much depleted and heavily encumbered. The outlook was bleak: such circumstances often led to the disappearance of families as landowners. However, within a generation, he and his remarkable wife Alice had modernised the estate and secured the family's future. After 700 years, the Le Stranges still survive and prosper on their estate at Hunstanton, making them the longest surviving gentry family in Norfolk. The first part of this book presents new research into the secret of their rare success. A key aspect of their strategy was a belief in the power (and economic value) of knowledge: Hamon and Alice wanted to ensure that their improvements would endure for posterity. To this end, they curated their knowledge through meticulous record-keeping and carefully handed it down to their successors. This behaviour, instilled in the family, not only facilitated on-going reforms, but helped future generations overcome the inevitable reversals and challenges they also faced.
The second part of the book collects together four related papers from Elizabeth Griffiths' research about the Le Stranges, Hobarts and Wyndhams, republished from the Agricultural History Review and edited from two Norfolk Record Society volumes. For anyone interested in early modern rural society and agriculture and the history of Norfolk gentry estates, this volume will be essential reading, offering as it does new perspectives on the history of estate management, notably the role of women, the relationship with local communities and sustainability in agriculture.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Hatfield
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 248 mm
Width: 171 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-912260-45-4 (9781912260454)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Jane Whittle is Professor of Economic and Social History at the University of Exeter and Series Editor of Studies in Regional and Local History for University of Hertfordshire Press. Elizabeth Griffiths was an honorary research fellow at University of Exeter and co-author, with Jane Whittle, of Consumption and Gender in the Early Seventeenth Century Household: The World of Alice Le Strange (OUP, 2012).
Content
1 The Le Strange family and their records
2 The medieval inheritance of the Le Strange estates
3 The Le Strange estate in 1604
4 Winners and losers: Norfolk gentry and estate management, 1590-1625
5 The knowledge economy of the Le Strange family
6 Using knowledge and working with people: building projects on the Le Strange estate
7 Her price is above pearls: family and farming records of Alice Le Strange, 1617-56
8 Draining the coastal marshes of north-west Norfolk: the contribution of the Le Stranges of Hunstanton, 1605-1724
9 William Windham's Green Book, 1673-88: estate management in the later seventeenth century
10 Responses to adversity: the changing strategies of two Norfolk landowning families, c.1665-1700
Epilogue: The Le Stranges of Hunstanton, c.1700-2000
2 The medieval inheritance of the Le Strange estates
3 The Le Strange estate in 1604
4 Winners and losers: Norfolk gentry and estate management, 1590-1625
5 The knowledge economy of the Le Strange family
6 Using knowledge and working with people: building projects on the Le Strange estate
7 Her price is above pearls: family and farming records of Alice Le Strange, 1617-56
8 Draining the coastal marshes of north-west Norfolk: the contribution of the Le Stranges of Hunstanton, 1605-1724
9 William Windham's Green Book, 1673-88: estate management in the later seventeenth century
10 Responses to adversity: the changing strategies of two Norfolk landowning families, c.1665-1700
Epilogue: The Le Stranges of Hunstanton, c.1700-2000