CONTENTS 



XI 



of landowners ; the finance of the Restoration, and the abolition of 

 military tenures ; legislation to promote agriculture ; Gregory King on 

 the State and Condition of England and Wales in 1696 : the distribution 

 of population and wealth. Pp. 130-147 



CHAPTER VII. 



\ 



JETHRO TULL AND LORD TOWNSHEND. 1700-1760. 



Agricultural progress in the eighteenth century; enclosures necessary to 

 advance ; advocates and opponents of the enclosing movement ; area 

 of uncultivated land and of land cultivated in open-fields ; defects of the 

 open-field system as a method of farming ; pasture commons as adjuncts 

 to open-field holdings ; the necessary lead in agricultural progress given 

 by large landowners and large farmers ; procedure in enclosures by Act 

 of Parliament : varying dates at which districts have been enclosed : 

 influence of soil and climate in breaking up or maintaining the open-field 

 system : the East Midland and North Eastern group of counties : improved 

 methods and increased resources of farming ; Jethro Tull the " greatest 

 individual improver " ; Lord Townshend's influence on Norfolk husbandry. 



Pp. 148-175 



CHAPTER VIII. 



THE STOCK-BREEDER'S ART AND ROBERT BAKEWELL. 



1725-1795. 



Necessity for improving the live-stock of the country ; sheep valued for 

 their wool, cattle for power of draught or yield of milk ; beef and mutton 

 the growing need : Robert Bakewell the agricultural opportunist ; his 

 experiments with the Black Horse, the Leicester Longhorns, and the New 

 Leicestere ; rapid progress of stock-breeding : sacrifice of wool to mutton. 



Pp. 176-189 



CHAPTER IX. 



ARTHUR YOUNG AND THE DIFFUSION OF 

 KNOWLEDGE. 1760-1800. 



The counties distinguished for the best farming : Hertfordshire, Essex, Suffolk, 

 Norfolk, Leicestershire : the low general standard ; Arthur Young ; his 

 crusade against bad farming, and the hindrances to progress ; waste 

 land ; the " Goths and Vandals " of open-field farmers : want of capital 

 and education ; insecurity of tenure ; prejudices and traditional practices ; 

 impassable roads ; rapid development of manufacture demands a change 

 of agricultural front : Young's advocacy of capitalist landlords and large 

 tenant-farmers. Pp. 190-206 



