Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 121 |
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Page 151
view that the economy was much larger in the mid - eighteenth century than it was once conventional to assume , and , even more important , that output per head was only modestly lower at that time than in the early years of Victoria's ...
view that the economy was much larger in the mid - eighteenth century than it was once conventional to assume , and , even more important , that output per head was only modestly lower at that time than in the early years of Victoria's ...
Page 163
It is not yet possible to attempt a convincing estimate of the comparable situation in Elizabethan times , but it is unlikely that England enjoyed any advantage over her neighbours in this regard in the sixteenth century .
It is not yet possible to attempt a convincing estimate of the comparable situation in Elizabethan times , but it is unlikely that England enjoyed any advantage over her neighbours in this regard in the sixteenth century .
Page 166
It is unlikely that the rate of growth of production per head changed much between a date which might provisionally be located in the early seventeenth century and the mid - nineteenth century . It may even have been higher before ...
It is unlikely that the rate of growth of production per head changed much between a date which might provisionally be located in the early seventeenth century and the mid - nineteenth century . It may even have been higher before ...
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Contents
The Origins of the Civilisation of Angkor | 41 |
Yorkshire Writers | 91 |
Shakespeare and the Anagram | 111 |
Copyright | |
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