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E-raamat: History of the British Coal Industry: Towards the Age of Coal, v.1, Before 1700 [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

(Reader in Economic and Social History, University of Cambridge, and Fellow, Corpus Christi College)
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This is the eagerly awaited first volume of the definitive History of the British Coal Industry. Well before 1700 Britain had become heavily dependent upon coal for its fuel, and coalmining had taken its place among the nation's staple industries. John Hatcher traces the production and trade of coal from the intermittent small-scale activity which prevailed in the Middle Ages to the rapid expansion and rising importance which characterized the early modern era.

Thoroughly grounded in a formidable range of sources, the book explores the economics and management of mining, the productivity and profitability of colliery enterprise, and the progress of technology. Dr Hatcher examines the owners and operators of collieries and the sources of mining capital, as well as the colliers themselves, their working conditions and earnings. He argues that the spectacular growth of coal output in this period was achieved more through evolutionary than revolutionary processes.

This is a scholarly, detailed, and comprehensive study, which will be an essential source for all historians of the medieval and early modern economy, and fascinating reading for anyone with an interest in the British coal industry.

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Winner of Wadsworth Prize for Business History 1993.Completing the definitive five-volume history
Part 1 Towards the age of coal: the era of cheap fuel -from early times
to the mid-16th century; from abundance to scarcity - the rise of coal
1550-1700. Part 2 Regional developments and national trends: the coalfields
of Britain. Part 3 The production of coal: mines and the techniques of
mining; ownership and enterprise; management; labour relations and work
discipline; the economics of mining; life and labour in the collieries. Part
4 The consumption of coal: sales and transport; measuring the coal trade; the
organization of the East cost trade; the coal industry and the economy in
early modern Britain.