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Empowered or marginalized? Rural women and credit in later thirteenth- and fourteenth-century England
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2004
Year
Women EmpowermentRural WomenWomen's RightLawEconomic HistorySocial SciencesRural SociologyGender StudiesHistorical SocietiesCultural HistoryFeminist EconomicsFeminist ScholarshipCredit MarketFeminist PerspectiveFeminist TheoryWider Economic DevelopmentSociologyRural EnglandBusinessDebt BondageFinancial InclusionFourteenth-century EnglandBankruptcy
Recent research on both contemporary and historical societies argues for the importance of women's independent access to credit as a positive force for empowerment of the women concerned and for wider economic development. This article investigates this issue for rural England between c.1290 and c.1380 using debt litigation records from two well-documented manor courts. The article concludes that involvement in credit networks brought little female empowerment in medieval English villages because relatively few women acted as independent lenders and borrowers. However, local credit networks featured women more prominently in some places than others, and reasons for this are advanced.