Poverty and Disorder Flashcards

1
Q

What drove the Elizabethan poor law policies?

A

Elizabethan poor law policies were driven by localised fear and confidence at the centre

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2
Q

What was evident in English society by 1580?

A

By 1580 there were clear structural economic issues: enclosures, over reliance on the cloth trade, international competition

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3
Q

What did the contemporary debate of poverty and disorder focus on?

A

Contemporary discourse on poverty and disorder focused on ideas of human failings and how to classify the poor- i.e. deserving, undeserving

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4
Q

What is evident in late Elizabethan urban censuses?

A

In late Elizabethan urban censuses there is a clear record of the labouring poor (willing but unable to work)

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5
Q

What was the tripartite classification system of poverty which emerged in Elizabethan England?

A

The Elizabethan era saw the emergence of the tripartite classification of the impotent, the thriftless and the labouring poor

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6
Q

When was decisive legislation passed in regards to poverty and disorder?

A

In 1597 and 1601 there was decisive legislation passed with regards to poverty and disorder: The Vagabonds Act and An Act For The Relief Of The Poor

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7
Q

What did the Vagabonds Act and An Act For The Relief Of The Poor establish as the management for the English poor?

A

Vagrants were to be whipped, the impotent relieved, and the unemployed found work

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8
Q

What does Tudor social legislation indicate about the nature of governance in England?

A

Tudor social legislation is evidence of a paternalistic moral tone- especially considering the rhetoric of social justice surrounding monarchy

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9
Q

How were poverty and disorder acts found nationwide support?

A

Poverty and disorder acts were infused with references to the body politic- a key early modern concern- in order to garner support

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10
Q

What is a crucial aspect of Tudor propaganda with regards to poverty and disorder?

A

A crucial aspect of Tudor propaganda with regards to poverty and disorder is the success of the metaphor of disease for idleness- that it is infecting the body politic

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11
Q

What can be said of the breadth of poverty-related policies passed in the Tudor era?

A

The sheer breadth of policy concerns shows an overstretched regime outstripping its own resources

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12
Q

What has changed in the historiography of Tudor mechanisms regarding poverty and disorder?

A

A new emphasis on limitations of policies and their implementation seeks to challenge traditional interpretations clouded by the Victorian tradition which exaggerated the extent of government capabilities

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13
Q

How can Tudor social policy be depicted as comprehensive?

A

Tudor social policy can be seen as comprehensive because by 1598 there were regular presentments (legal lay-outs of the context) established

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14
Q

What was the most severe social issue faced by Tudor governments?

A

The most severe social issue faced by Tudor governments was dearths (subsistence crises)

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15
Q

How did Tudor governments attempt to manage periods of dearth?

A

Periods of dearth were managed via dearth orders, although there are cases such as in 1587 where counties refuse to act and restrict grain- there was also a staying clear of terms such as famine

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16
Q

How can the Privy Council’s paramountcy be questioned?

A

Although the Privy Council had indisputable power, it felt it necessary to justify actions with precedent and statute law until 1638

17
Q

How can failures in dearth management be studied?

A

We can study government failures in dearth management by looking at records of grain surveys and food rioting

18
Q

How can the centre / periphery disparity between social policy and local desires be exemplified?

A

The centre / periphery disparity in social policies can be shown through the lack of implementation of the Ale Assize (matching ale prices to that of corn)

19
Q

What should be remembered about the Poor Laws and their continual veneration?

A

Poor rates had been levied prior to the 1590s, and implementation of the poor laws lagged in the north to the point of the Lord Lieutenant criticising it in 1586.

20
Q

What were the limitations of parish overseers?

A

Parish overseers were often distrusted, and although there to manage disputes and petitions to the poor laws, administration varied and often allowed begging out of ease.

21
Q

What were the disputes often dealt with in the poor law mechanisms?

A

The disputes dealt with by overseers of the poor were often related to the life-cycle or accidents: orphaning, widowing, disability etc.

22
Q

What can be said about the use of poor laws for the average Elizabethan subject?

A

Poor laws were often viewed as a last resort, sustenance was instead maintained by sacrificing comforts, appealing to kin networks and informal charity

23
Q

What was the nature of the poor laws in 1590s Kent?

A

Poor laws in 1590s Kent had a default rate of 10-15% because of conservatism, snobbery, and self-interest leading to falls in revenues

24
Q

By how much could poor law revenues fall due to a lack of parish participants?

A

poor law rates were known to fall up to 60% because of denial of payment

25
Q

How can parish loyalties and financial focuses be shown?

A

Parish loyalties are evident in reactions to the 1589 statute on lodging- there was an erosion of tolerance which broke into violence in places

26
Q

What was the swaying influence in centre-periphery disparity in policies according to S. Hindle?

A

S. Hindle suggests that the demands of local labour markets swayed local governments into implementing (or not) centre policies

27
Q

What was the reaction to increases in illegitimate children?

A

A rise in illegitimate children led to more punitive measures, largely tried to use paternal orders to avoid economic responsibility going to the state

28
Q

What was the consequence of failing to enforce paternity orders?

A

Failure to enforce paternity orders led to the burden of the child falling to the parish- especially as unwed mothers’ punishments increased from the stocks to whippings

29
Q

How was unemployment solved?

A

Unemployment of the labouring poor was solved haphazardly, the socio-economic conditions outstripped policy capabilities

30
Q

How was vagrancy solved in the late Elizabethan era?

A

Vagrancy was solved via an installation of martial law and houses of correction

31
Q

What was the content of martial law being warranted in regards to vagrancy?

A

Martial law was allowed in regards to vagrancy 1590s+, it meant that Officers could roam the kingdom and perform summary justice

32
Q

What was the nature of houses of correction in response to vagrancy?

A

Houses of correction tried to create “social transformation” by having 15 hour work days and 45 minutes to eat and pray

33
Q

When were houses of correction established, how did they grow?

A

Houses of correction were established in 1576, by 1600 1/4 of counties had one, by 1598 Devon had four

34
Q

What was an issue with the 1597 An Act For the Relief of the Poor?

A

The 1597 An Act For the Relief of the Poor was too vague in language, it had to be readdressed under James

35
Q

What can be said of the constant re-creating of policies on poverty and disorder?

A

The reassessing of poverty laws suggests that there was contemporary awareness of failures and limitations of policy

36
Q

How many plague relief policies were passed between the 1578-1646?

A

Between 1578 and 1646, 9 Privy Council acts were passed with focuses on regulation and supervision

37
Q

What was the acceptance of Tudor plague policies like?

A

Tudor plague policies were often seen as inhumane by contemporaries, and were not cohesive in their implementation which caused social antagonism

38
Q

What were the two functions of social policies according to S. Hindle?

A

S. Hindle suggested that social policy both helped redistribute authority as well as help subjects