4.2.3
Enclosure
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Enclosure
Enclosure was met with hostility. It was the cause of several uprisings in Tudor England.

Enclosure
- This meant that agricultural land which was once common (available to any farmer) was now exclusively owned.
- Farmers could work on a larger scale and try new farming techniques. This led to an increase in production and greater profitability.
- But enclosure meant many poor farmers lost their land and livelihood and were forced to move elsewhere.

State efforts to prevent enclosure
- The state was anxious to prevent enclosure.
- The Muddled Acts were passed in 1489 and 1515 to prevent enclosure.
- Cromwell passed an act in 1534 designed to limit how many sheep an individual could own.
- But it was very difficult to stop enclosure.

Uprisings against enclosure
- There were disturbances over enclosure.
- e.g. Nottingham 1512, Gloucester 1513, London 1514
- The Pontefract articles from the Pilgrimage of Grace and the Mousehold articles from Kett’s rebellion both highlight that enclosure was a concern.
- Rebels believed that enclosure was a denial of common rights.
1Monarch & Government
1.1Tudor Monarchs
1.2Changing Role of Parliament
1.3Principal Servants to the Crown
2Religious Changes
2.1Tudor Monarchs & Religious Change
2.2Catholicism & Survival
2.3Protestantism & Puritanism
3State Control & Popular Resistance
3.1Tudor Control of the Country
3.2The State & the Poor
4Economic, Social & Cultural Change
4.1Patterns of Domestic & Foreign Trade
4.2Changing Structure of Society
5Historical Interpretations
5.1Significance of Threats to National Security
5.2Court Politics
5.3Elizabeth & Parliament
5.4Social Distress in the 1590s
Jump to other topics
1Monarch & Government
1.1Tudor Monarchs
1.2Changing Role of Parliament
1.3Principal Servants to the Crown
2Religious Changes
2.1Tudor Monarchs & Religious Change
2.2Catholicism & Survival
2.3Protestantism & Puritanism
3State Control & Popular Resistance
3.1Tudor Control of the Country
3.2The State & the Poor
4Economic, Social & Cultural Change
4.1Patterns of Domestic & Foreign Trade
4.2Changing Structure of Society
5Historical Interpretations
5.1Significance of Threats to National Security
5.2Court Politics
5.3Elizabeth & Parliament
5.4Social Distress in the 1590s
Practice questions on Enclosure
Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.
- 1Advantages of Enclosure:Fill in the list
- 2Due to enclosure, who lost their land and livelihood?Multiple choice
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