Agricultural Investment and the Management of the Royal Demesne Manors, 1236–1240
Robert C. Stacey
The Journal of Economic History, 1986, vol. 46, issue 4, 919-934
Abstract:
Between 1236 and 1240 the king's estate steward Walter de Burgo improved the productivity of about forty royal manors by systematically increasing agricultural investment to levels four to five times the medieval average. On estates where he managed the inland directly, de Burgo improved the quality of the draft animals and spent large sums on marling, smother crops, and on the purchase of foreign seed. Within four years he raised the net value of these manors 70 percent, thus demonstrating the direct link which could exist between investment levels and productivity in medieval agriculture.
Date: 1986
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