The Upper Classes: Property and Privilege in BritainMacmillan, 1982 - 213 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 31
Página 10
... privileged life - style , the lower was the level of technical innovation , and the greater was the tendency towards declining agricultural productivity . 32 To this extent it is true to say that the history of the development of feudal ...
... privileged life - style , the lower was the level of technical innovation , and the greater was the tendency towards declining agricultural productivity . 32 To this extent it is true to say that the history of the development of feudal ...
Página 21
... privileged classes . In wealth , power and status the magnates eclipsed both the gentry and the bourgeoisie . In 1436 the great magnates ( of whom members of the peerage numbered about 60 ) had consolidated their estates into a number ...
... privileged classes . In wealth , power and status the magnates eclipsed both the gentry and the bourgeoisie . In 1436 the great magnates ( of whom members of the peerage numbered about 60 ) had consolidated their estates into a number ...
Página 95
... privileged social classes , in terms of both class situation and status situation . But the classes did not achieve complete integration . Whilst the landowners and the City fraction had certainly come very close to one another ...
... privileged social classes , in terms of both class situation and status situation . But the classes did not achieve complete integration . Whilst the landowners and the City fraction had certainly come very close to one another ...
Contenido
Property and Privilege in Perspective | 1 |
Magnates Gentry and Bourgeoisie | 12 |
The monopolisation of social honour | 27 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
activities agricultural assets background banks baronets Britain British British Peerage business class Cambridge capital cent civil servants class situation commercial companies corporatism corporatist economic eighteenth century Elite England English enterprises entrepreneurial capitalists establishment farmers feudal finance capitalists formal gentlemen gentry Giddens Guttsman Habakkuk Harmondsworth hierarchy House of Lords important income increased industrial industrial revolution institutions interests involved Kegan Paul Keynesian kinship knight bachelor knighthood knights labour landed class landlord landowners legitimation crisis life-style London Lords magnates major manufacturing marriage merchants military Mingay monopoly sector nineteenth century officers organisations Otley ownership Oxbridge parliament parliamentary party pattern peerage peers period positions privileged classes production proportion public schools recruitment relation rentiers role Routledge & Kegan royal shareholders social class Society Stanworth status group strategic control stratification stratum Table titles University Press wealth wealth-holders Weber Whigs Whilst
Referencias a este libro
Talking Proper: The Rise of Accent as Social Symbol Lynda Mugglestone Sin vista previa disponible - 2007 |