Economy, asked by galangsm29, 7 months ago

What contexts allowed for the change in Great Britain’s social class dynamics????

Answers

Answered by mukeshmasih04
5

The population expanded rapidly in the 13th century, reaching a level of about five million. Great landlords prospered with the system of high farming, but the average size of small peasant holdings fell, with no compensating rise in productivity. There has been debate about the fate of the knightly class: some historians have argued that lesser landowners suffered a decline in wealth and numbers, while others have pointed to their increased political importance as evidence of their prosperity.

Answered by AadilPradhan
0

The 13th century saw a sharp rise in population, reaching a peak of approximately five million people.

  • Great landowners gained from the high farming system, but small peasant holdings generally declined without an increase in output. The future of the knightly class has been debated; some historians contend that smaller landowners saw a decline in population and revenue.
  • There is still a sizable class divide in Britain.
  • Even though the same colleges, churches, and schools dominate public life, changes are happening despite the impression of stasis.
  • Without a doubt, social class is no longer cleanly categorised by work.
  • A wide variety of services are accessible to people of all income levels.
  • No longer is class solely a vertical ranking determined by resources and a production system.
  • You can keep track of many class IDs.
  • What class, for example, comprises of a college grad who works at a call centre, lives with friends, and later in middle life expects some "support" from their parents in the form of a mortgage?
  • Although the market does not play a large part in the definition of our social classes, they are now usually seen as evidence of free-market capitalism.
  • Markets, employers and workers, slaves and masters—all have existed for ages.
  • Industrial capitalism was innovative because of the technological advancements that gave rise to it.

Without the development of equipment to harness the power of carbon, first through coal, we would not have been able to significantly alter our civilizations and affect our planet in such a short amount of time. This rearrangement is still under progress.

#SPJ2

Similar questions