INDEX 



491 



423 ; his Speculum Britanniae, 423 ; 

 on the squatters, 126 ; on the Vale 

 of Belvoir, 168 ; on the Vale of 

 Taunton, 135. 



Norfolk, Report on (Kent), 239, 305 ; 

 (Young), 197, 293 ; Defoe on, 166 ; 

 enclosure in, 66, 216, 305 ; estates 

 of all sizes in, 293 ; farmer in 

 Devonshire, 202 ; farming in eigh- 

 teenth century, 194 ; Kett's re- 

 belhon, 48, 72, 96 ; light lands of 

 Norfolk, 174, 373 ; live-stock sent 

 to Smithfield, 194 ; Marshall on the 

 farmers of, 193 ; ploughing in, 109 ; 

 polled cattle of, 180 ; turnips in, 

 166 ; writs and executions in 1814- 

 15, 323 ; Norfolk exports of corn, 

 194. 



North country, the, rise of industries 

 in, 308. 



Northampton, boot industry at, 310. 



Northamptonshire, Report on (Don- 

 aldson), 236, 244 ; industries in, 

 310. 



Northumberland, Report on (Bailey 

 and Culley), 177, 222, 226 ; (and 

 see John Grey of Dilston). 



Norwich, labour statutes at, 53 ; 

 Icknield Street, 279 ; roads near, 

 279 ; waste land near, 240 ; 

 woollen trade at, 309. 



Nottingham, industries at, 310. 



Nottinghamshire, Report on (Lowe), 

 237, 293 ; industries in, 310. 



Notts (sheep), from Devonshire, 178. 



Nourse, Timothy, his Campania 

 Foelix, 150, 430. 



" Nowe-a-dayes " (Ballad), 62. 



Oakingham (Wokingham), silk in- 

 dustry at, 310. 



Oats, sown with barley, 9 ; best 

 sown in March, 109. 



Observations on a Pamphlet entitled 

 An Enquiry into the Advantages and 

 Disadvantages of Enclosure, 303. 



Odams, Mr., fertiliser, 367. 



Odiham, Agricultural Society at, 209. 



Oenomel, 18. 



Oglander, Sir John, his Memoirs, 83. 



Oil, from nuts, 18 ; from turnips. 111; 

 from cole-seed, 131. 



Oil cake, 218. 



An Old Almanack . . . printed in 

 1710, quoted, 150. 



Ombersley, 276. 



Onions, 102. 



Open-field system, the, 224 seq., 23 

 seq., 51, 53 ; in 1700, 154 ; in 1726, 

 154 ; in 1837, 354 ; Arthur Young 

 on, 199 ; break-up of, 149 seq. ; in 



Buckinghamshire, voluntary agree- 

 ments fail, 162 ; crops under, 92, 

 93, 97, 155, 199 ; decline of, 103 ; 

 disadvantages of, 155 seq., 224 seq., 

 199; economics of, 122, 132, 134; 

 enclosures and, 71, 97, 99; enclosure 

 strengthens, 56 ; enclosure of waste 

 affects, 165 ; exhaustion under, 

 166 ; extinction of, 291 ; farmers 

 different from enclosure farmers, 

 222 ; Fen lands, analogy with, 118 

 seq. ; Goths and Vandals of, 222 ; 

 herdsmen, payment to, 65 ; 

 manure, lack of, 65 ; sheep on, 95, 

 155. 



Opium, taken for ague in tlie Fen 

 lands, 245. 



Oratories, 335, 336. 



Orchards, 106. 



Ormerod, Eleanor, 386. 



Osborne, royal farm at, 360. 



Otmoor, 235. 



Ouse, the Great, 1 16, 276 ; the Lesser, 

 116. 



Out-door relief, see Poor Laws. 



Out-field land, in Scotland, 160. 



Ovens, of the lord of the manor, 19 ; 

 village, 29. 



Overend and Gurney, failure of, 374. 



Ownership, the incentive of, 415 ; 

 can it be established on a more 

 democratic basis, 417 ; a vital 

 principle, 417. 



Owse, 109. 



Oxen, dead-weight of, 98 ; used for 

 ploughs, 13, 92, 202, 354 ; Hartlib's 

 remedy for colic in, 111 ; the 

 Durham ox, 188 ; the Lincoln- 

 shire ox, 180, 181. 



Oxford, Royal Agricultural Society's 

 show at, in 1839, 369. 



Oxfordshire, Report on (Young), 222 ; 

 (Davis), 234, 293 ; industries in, 

 310. 



Ox-gang, broad, 21 ; narrow, 22. 



Pack-saddles, 204. 

 Paddle-plough, for potatoes, 369. 

 Page, T. W., The End of Villeinage in 



England, 23, 40. 

 Palavicino, Sir Horatio, 114. 

 PaHssy, Bernard, 89. 

 Palladius, on draining, 10 ; rhymed 



versionof, 33, 419; 99. 

 PalUards, 76. 



Palmer, John, his mail-coaches, 284. 

 Panic, agricultural, 371 ; financial, 



212, 37'4, 375. 

 Paper money, 211 ; destroyed, 212, 



213. 

 Parham's ploughs, 104. 



