AP European History › Agriculture
The Enclosure Acts in the early nineteenth century had which of the following effects?
All of these answers
Increased the agricultural production of Britain
Caused many former farmers to move to the colonies
Led to a decline in subsistence farming
None of these answers
Prior to the signing of the various enclosure acts, much of British farming was done on a very small scale. Most farming was merely subsistence farming, done to support the family with a small amount left over as surplus. The land was generally commonly owned, or rather, was organized in an open field system in which land was divided into small patches worked by peasants. Enclosure Acts made this land private and led to the rise of large-scale agricultural production. This had numerous consequences for British society. It led to a massive surge in agricultural production and a decline in the number of people needed to work the fields to feed the population. This in turn caused many farmers to move either to the colonies (providing the raw manpower for British colonialism) or to move to cities (providing the raw manpower for the Industrial Revolution).
During the Agricultural Revolution, the population of England __________.
more than doubled
increased slightly
stayed roughly the same
decreased slightly
emigrated in massive numbers
During the Agricultural Revolution, the population of England more than doubled. The Agricultural Revolution meant that fewer workers could produce a greater surplus of food. A much higher population could be supported by a smaller number of workers than ever before. Many of the displaced rural population moved to cities providing the raw human manpower to spur the Industrial Revolution.
The invention of the flying shuttle transformed which of these industries during the Industrial Revolution?
Textiles
Coal mining
Transportation
Iron mining
Construction
The flying shuttle was developed by John Kay in the 1730s and quickly revolutionized the textile industry in Britain. Along with the spinning jenny and the water frame, the flying shuttle encouraged the budding industrial revolution and gave extra life to cottage industry, as textiles became immensely cheaper and quicker to produce.
Which of the following is the name of the practice that was developed in England during the British Agricultural Revolution and allowed farmers to grow crops and keep livestock year-round while keeping the soil fertile?
The Norfolk four-course system
Sussex seasonal crop rotation
Suffolk seasonal course system
Yorkshire four-tiered agricultural system
Derbyshire farming method
The Norfolk four-course system was an important part of the British Agricultural Revolution of the eighteenth century. It was a crop rotation system designed to grow different crops in the same soil at different times of the year. It generally involved a rotation of wheat, turnips, barley, and clover. The advantages were numerous: it allowed farmers to make a much healthier profit, it allowed livestock to be kept and fed year-round, it kept the soil fertile, and it provided greater protection against blights.
What term is used to describe soil that is left unsown for a period of time so as to restore its fertility and ability to produce crops?
Fallow
Fodder
Yielding
Eager
Shoddy
To let a field "lie fallow” means to leave it unsown and uncultivated for a period of time so as to restore the soil's fertility and ensure that the nutrients in the soil can be replenished. Human civilization has long understood that using the same land over and over again, without interruption, will cause the nutrients in that soil to be depleted and ensure starvation in the long term. To get around this, people often let fields lie “fallow” for a period of time. One of the innovations of the British Agricultural Revolution was the realization that by rotating four particular crops, those crops would use different nutrients and some would even replenish the nutrients in the ground, leading to much less wasted time and space, and less frequent famine and disease.
Cornelius Vermuyden __________.
introduced Dutch land reclamation projects to Northern England
pioneered the Norfolk Crop Rotation system
developed the seed drill
led the movement in Parliament away from the “open field” system and towards the “enclosure” system
spread the use of the horse drawn plow around Northern Europe
Cornelius Vermuyden was a Dutch engineer who in the seventeenth century introduced Dutch land reclamation projects to Yorkshire and Lancashire in Northern England. This project turned land in Yorkshire and Lancashire into some of the most fecund and productive land area in England and was an important part of the massive increase in food production in England in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Which of these best describes the Enclosure Movement?
The process of consolidating many small farms into fewer large farms
The process of dividing plots of land to be worked by the peasants within a community
The process by which the crown acquired much of the land once held by the aristocracy
The process by which the crown acquired much of the land once held by the monasteries
None of these answers describes the Enclosure Movement.
The Enclosure Movement took place gradually in England beginning around the thirteenth century, but really accelerated in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries during the British Agricultural Revolution. The process involved consolidating all the small agricultural landholdings that existed under the “open field” system into a smaller number of much larger farms. This would have many consequences, but the most notable were the dramatic increase in food production and the forced migration of peasants from the countryside to urban areas in search of work.
Which of the following individuals is well-known for popularizing the use of turnips to keep soil fertile during the British Agricultural Revolution?
Charles Townshend
Jethro Tull
James Hargreaves
James Watt
William Gladstone
Charles “Turnip” Townshend was a long-time British politician who upon retiring from public office popularized the use of turnips to keep soil fertile and prevent farmers from having to spend large periods of each year leaving their land fallow. This was an important step in the British Agricultural Revolution.
What caused an estimated one million people to die in Ireland in the middle of the 19th century?
A great famine caused by ruined potato harvests.
A massive drought causing a lack of clean water.
A bloody invasion by the English.
A pneumonia epidemic.
None of these
The Irish Potato Famine killed roughly one million people in Ireland between 1845 and 1852. The famine was brought on by potato blight, a disease which ruins potato crops.
The British agriculturalist Jethro Tull pioneered the __________.
horse-drawn seed drill
Norfolk four-course system
open field system
enclosure system
use of horseshoes and horse collars
Jethro Tull was a British agriculturist who helped contribute a great deal to the advent of the British Agricultural Revolution in the eighteenth century. He was a deep thinker who wanted to apply the principles of the Enlightenment and the Scientific Revolution to improving the practice of agriculture in Britain. To this end, he pioneered the horse-drawn seed drill and advocated for the use of horses instead of oxen. He also scientifically demonstrated the importance of frequent hoeing to keep the soil healthy.