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Book Three
Of the Different Progress of Opulence in Different Nations.
CHAPTER II
Of the Discouragement of Agriculture in the ancient State of
Europe after the Fall of the Roman Empire
WHEN the German and Scythian nations overran the western
provinces of the Roman empire, the confusions which followed so
great a revolution lasted for several centuries. The rapine and
violence which the barbarians exercised against the ancient
inhabitants interrupted the commerce between the towns and the
country. The towns were deserted, and the country was left
uncultivated, and the western provinces of Europe, which had
enjoyed a considerable degree of opulence under the Roman empire,
sunk into the lowest state of poverty and barbarism. During the
continuance of those confusions, the chiefs and principal leaders
of those nations acquired or usurped to themselves the greater
part of the lands of those countries. A great part of them was
uncultivated; but no part of them, whether cultivated or
uncultivated, was left without a proprietor. All of them were
engrossed, and the greater part by a few great proprietors.
This original engrossing of uncultivated lands, though a
great, might have been but a transitory evil. They might soon
have been divided again, and broke into small parcels either by
succession or by alienation. The law of primogeniture hindered
them from being divided by succession: the introduction of
entails prevented their being broke into small parcels by
alienation.
When land, like movables, is considered as the means only of
subsistence and enjoyment, the natural law of succession divides
it, like them, among all the children of the family; of an of
whom the subsistence and enjoyment may be supposed equally dear
to the father. This natural law of succession accordingly took
place among the Romans, who made no more distinction between
elder and younger, between male and female, in the inheritance of
lands than we do in the distribution of movables. But when land
was considered as the means, not of subsistence merely, but of
power and protection, it was thought better that it should
descend undivided to one. In those disorderly times every great
landlord was a sort of petty prince. His tenants were his
subjects. He was their judge, and in some respects their
legislator in peace, and their leader in war. He made war
according to his own discretion, frequently against his
neighbours, and sometimes against his sovereign. The security of
a landed estate, therefore, the protection which its owner could
afford to those who dwelt on it, depended upon its greatness. To
divide it was to ruin it, and to expose every part of it to be
oppressed and swallowed up by the incursions of its neighbours.
The law of primogeniture, therefore, came to take place, not
immediately, indeed, but in process of time, in the succession of
landed estates, for the same reason that it has generally taken
place in that of monarchies, though not always at their first
institution. That the power, and consequently the security of the
monarchy, may not be weakened by division, it must descend entire
to one of the children. To which of them so important a
preference shall be given must be determined by some general
rule, founded not upon the doubtful distinctions of personal
merit, but upon some plain and evident difference which can admit
of no dispute. Among the children of the same family, there can
be no indisputable difference but that of sex, and that of age.
The male sex is universally preferred to the female; and when all
other things are equal, the elder everywhere takes place of the
younger. Hence the origin of the right of primogeniture, and of
what is called lineal succession.
Laws frequently continue in force long after the
circumstances which first gave occasion to them, and which could
alone render them reasonable, are no more. In the present state
of Europe, the proprietor of a single acre of land is as
perfectly secure of his possession as the proprietor of a hundred
thousand. The right of primogeniture, however, still continues to
be respected, and as of all institutions it is the fittest to
support the pride of family distinctions, it is still likely to
endure for many centuries. In every other respect, nothing can be
more contrary to the real interest of a numerous family than a
right which, in order to enrich one, beggars all the rest of the
children.
Entails are the natural consequences of the law of
primogeniture. They were introduced to preserve a certain lineal
succession, of which the law of primogeniture first gave the
idea, and to hinder any part of the original estate from being
carried out of the proposed line either by gift, or devise, or
alienation; either by the folly, or by the misfortune of any of
its successive owners. They were altogether unknown to the
Romans. Neither their substitutions nor fideicommisses bear any
resemblance to entails, though some French lawyers have thought
proper to dress the modern institution in the language and garb
of those ancient ones.
When great landed estates were a sort of principalities,
entails might not be unreasonable. Like what are called the
fundamental laws of some monarchies, they might frequently hinder
the security of thousands from being endangered by the caprice or
extravagance of one man. But in the present state of Europe, when
small as well as great estates derive their security from the
laws of their country, nothing can be more completely absurd.
They are founded upon the most absurd of all suppositions, the
supposition that every successive generation of men have not an
equal right to the earth, and to all that it possesses; but that
the property of the present generation should be restrained and
regulated according to the fancy of those who died perhaps five
hundred years ago. Entails, however, are still respected through
the greater part of Europe, in those countries particularly in
which noble birth is a necessary qualification for the enjoyment
either of civil or military honours. Entails are thought
necessary for maintaining this exclusive privilege of the
nobility to the great offices and honours of their country; and
that order having usurped one unjust advantage over the rest of
their fellow citizens, lest their poverty should render it
ridiculous, it is thought reasonable that they should have
another. The common law of England, indeed, is said to abhor
perpetuities, and they are accordingly more restricted there than
in any other European monarchy; though even England is not
altogether without them. In Scotland more than one-fifth, perhaps
more than one-third, part of the whole lands of the country are
at present supposed to be under strict entail.
Great tracts of uncultivated land were, in this manner, not
only engrossed by particular families, but the possibility of
their being divided again was as much as possible precluded for
ever. It seldom happens, however, that a great proprietor is a
great improver. In the disorderly times which gave birth to those
barbarous institutions, the great proprietor was sufficiently
employed in defending his own territories, or in extending his
jurisdiction and authority over those of his neighbours. He had
no leisure to attend to the cultivation and improvement of land.
When the establishment of law and order afforded him this
leisure, he often wanted the inclination, and almost always the
requisite abilities. If the expense of his house and person
either equalled or exceeded his revenue, as it did very
frequently, he had no stock to employ in this manner. If he was
an economist, he generally found it more profitable to employ his
annual savings in new purchases than in the improvement of his
old estate. To improve land with profit, like all other
commercial projects, requires an exact attention to small savings
and small gains, of which a man born to a great fortune, even
though naturally frugal, is very seldom capable. The situation of
such a person naturally disposes him to attend rather to ornament
which pleases his fancy than to profit for which he has so little
occasion. The elegance of his dress, of his equipage, of his
house, and household furniture, are objects which from his
infancy he has been accustomed to have some anxiety about. The
turn of mind which this habit naturally forms follows him when he
comes to think of the improvement of land. He embellishes perhaps
four or five hundred acres in the neighbourhood of his house, at
ten times the expense which the land is worth after all his
improvements; and finds that if he was to improve his whole
estate in the same manner, and he has little taste for any other,
he would be a bankrupt before he had finished the tenth part of
it. There still remain in both parts of the United Kingdom some
great estates which have continued without interruption in the
hands of the same family since the times of feudal anarchy.
Compare the present condition of those estates with the
possessions of the small proprietors in their neighbourhood, and
you will require no other argument to convince you how
unfavourable such extensive property is to improvement.
If little improvement was to be expected from such great
proprietors, still less was to be hoped for from those who
occupied the land under them. In the ancient state of Europe, the
occupiers of land were all tenants at will. They were all or
almost all slaves; but their slavery was of a milder kind than
that known among the ancient Greeks and Romans, or even in our
West Indian colonies. They were supposed to belong more directly
to the land than to their master. They could, therefore, be sold
with it, but not separately. They could marry, provided it was
with the consent of their master; and he could not afterwards
dissolve the marriage by selling the man and wife to different
persons. If he maimed or murdered any of them, he was liable to
some penalty, though generally but to a small one. They were not,
however, capable of acquiring property. Whatever they acquired
was acquired to their master, and he could take it from them at
pleasure. Whatever cultivation and improvement could be carried
on by means of such slaves was properly carried on by their
master. It was at his expense. The seed, the cattle, and the
instruments of husbandry were all his. It was for his benefit.
Such slaves could acquire nothing but their daily maintenance. It
was properly the proprietor himself, therefore, that, in this
case, occupied his own lands, and cultivated them by his own
bondmen. This species of slavery still subsists in Russia,
Poland, Hungary, Bohemia, Moravia, and other parts of Germany. It
is only in the western and southwestern provinces of Europe that
it has gradually been abolished altogether.
But if great improvements are seldom to be expected from
great proprietors, they are least of all to be expected when they
employ slaves for their workmen. The experience of all ages and
nations, I believe, demonstrates that the work done by slaves,
though it appears to cost only their maintenance, is in the end
the dearest of any. A person who can acquire no property, can
have no other interest but to eat as much, and to labour as
little as possible. Whatever work he does beyond what is
sufficient to purchase his own maintenance can be squeezed out of
him by violence only, and not by any interest of his own. In
ancient Italy, how much the cultivation of corn degenerated, how
unprofitable it became to the master when it fell under the
management of slaves, is remarked by both Pliny and Columella. In
the time of Aristotle it had not been much better in ancient
Greece. Speaking of the ideal republic described in the laws of
Plato, to maintain five thousand idle men (the number of warriors
supposed necessary for its defence) together with their women and
servants, would require, he says, a territory of boundless extent
and fertility, like the plains of Babylon.
The pride of man makes him love to domineer, and nothing
mortifies him so much as to be obliged to condescend to persuade
his inferiors. Wherever the law allows it, and the nature of the
work can afford it, therefore, he will generally prefer the
service of slaves to that of freemen. The planting of sugar and
tobacco can afford the expense of slave-cultivation. The raising
of corn, it seems, in the present times, cannot. In the English
colonies, of which the principal produce is corn, the far greater
part of the work is done by freemen. The late resolution of the
Quakers in Pennsylvania to set at liberty all their negro slaves
may satisfy us that their number cannot be very great. Had they
made any considerable part of their property, such a resolution
could never have been agreed to. In our sugar colonies, on the
contrary, the whole work is done by slaves, and in our tobacco
colonies a very great part of it. The profits of a
sugar-plantation in any of our West Indian colonies are generally
much greater than those of any other cultivation that is known
either in Europe or America; and the profits of a tobacco
plantation, though inferior to those of sugar, are superior to
those of corn, as has already been observed. Both can afford the
expense of slave-cultivation, but sugar can afford it still
better than tobacco. The number of negroes accordingly is much
greater, in proportion to that of whites, in our sugar than in
our tobacco colonies.
To the slave cultivators of ancient times gradually
succeeded a species of farmers known at present in France by the
name of metayers. They are called in Latin, Coloni partiarii.
They have been so long in disuse in England that at present I
know no English name for them. The proprietor furnished them with
the seed, cattle, and instruments of husbandry, the whole stock,
in short, necessary for cultivating the farm. The produce was
divided equally between the proprietor and the farmer, after
setting aside what was judged necessary for keeping up the stock,
which was restored to the proprietor when the farmer either
quitted, or was turned out of the farm.
Land occupied by such tenants is properly cultivated at the
expense of the proprietor as much as that occupied by slaves.
There is, however, one very essential difference between them.
Such tenants, being freemen, are capable of acquiring property,
and having a certain proportion of the produce of the land, they
have a plain interest that the whole produce should be as great
as possible, in order that their own proportion may be so. A
slave, on the contrary, who can acquire nothing but his
maintenance, consults his own ease by making the land produce as
little as possible over and above that maintenance. It is
probable that it was partly upon account of this advantage, and
partly upon account of the encroachments which the sovereign,
always jealous of the great lords, gradually encouraged their
villains to make upon their authority, and which seem at last to
have been such as rendered this species of servitude altogether
inconvenient, that tenure in villanage gradually wore out through
the greater part of Europe. The time and manner, however, in
which so important a revolution was brought about is one of the
most obscure points in modern history. The Church of Rome claims
great merit in it; and it is certain that so early as the twelfth
century, Alexander III published a bull for the general
emancipation of slaves. It seems, however, to have been rather a
pious exhortation than a law to which exact obedience was
required from the faithful. Slavery continued to take place
almost universally for several centuries afterwards, till it was
gradually abolished by the joint operation of the two interests
above mentioned, that of the proprietor on the one hand, and that
of the sovereign on the other. A villain enfranchised, and at the
same time allowed to continue in possession of the land, having
no stock of his own, could cultivate it only by means of what the
landlord advanced to him, and must, therefore, have been what the
French called a metayer.
It could never, however, be the interest even of this last
species of cultivators to lay out, in the further improvement of
the land, any part of the little stock which they might save from
their own share of the produce, because the lord, who laid out
nothing, was to get one half of whatever it produced. The tithe,
which is but a tenth of the produce, is found to be a very great
hindrance to improvement. A tax, therefore, which amounted to one
half must have been an effectual bar to it. It might be the
interest of a metayer to make the land produce as much as could
be brought out of it by means of the stock furnished by the
proprietor; but it could never be his interest to mix any part of
his own with it. In France, where five parts out of six of the
whole kingdom are said to be still occupied by this species of
cultivators, the proprietors complain that their metayers take
every opportunity of employing the master's cattle rather in
carriage than in cultivation; because in the one case they get
the whole profits to themselves, in the other they share them
with their landlord. This species of tenants still subsists in
some parts of Scotland. They are called steel-bow tenants. Those
ancient English tenants, who are said by Chief Baron Gilbert and
Doctor Blackstone to have been rather bailiffs of the landlord
than farmers properly so called, were probably of the same kind.
To this species of tenancy succeeded, though by very slow
degrees, farmers properly so called, who cultivated the land with
their own stock, paying a rent certain to the landlord. When such
farmers have a lease for a term of years, they may sometimes find
it for their interest to lay out part of their capital in the
further improvement of the farm; because they may sometimes
expect to recover it, with a large profit, before the expiration
of the lease. The possession even of such farmers, however, was
long extremely precarious, and still is so in many parts of
Europe. They could before the expiration of their term be legally
outed of their lease by a new purchaser; in England, even by the
fictitious action of a common recovery. If they were turned out
illegally by the violence of their master, the action by which
they obtained redress was extremely imperfect. It did not always
reinstate them in the possession of the land, but gave them
damages which never amounted to the real loss. Even in England,
the country perhaps of Europe where the yeomanry has always been
most respected, it was not till about the 14th of Henry VII that
the action of ejectment was invented, by which the tenant
recovers, not damages only but possession, and in which his claim
is not necessarily concluded by the uncertain decision of a
single assize. This action has been found so effectual a remedy
that, in the modern practice, when the landlord has occasion to
sue for the possession of the land, he seldom makes use of the
actions which properly belong to him as landlord, the Writ of
Right or the Writ of Entry, but sues in the name of his tenant by
the Writ of Ejectment. In England, therefore, the security of the
tenant is equal to that of the proprietor. In England, besides, a
lease for life of forty shillings a year value is a freehold, and
entitles the lessee to vote for a Member of Parliament; and as a
great part of the yeomanry have freeholds of this kind, the whole
order becomes respectable to their landlords on account of the
political consideration which this gives them. There is, I
believe, nowhere in Europe, except in England, any instance of
the tenant building upon the land of which he had no lease, and
trusting that the honour of his landlord would take no advantage
of so important an improvement. Those laws and customs so
favourable to the yeomanry have perhaps contributed more to the
present grandeur of England than all their boasted regulations of
commerce taken together.
The law which secures the longest leases against successors
of every kind is, so far as I know, peculiar to Great Britain. It
was introduced into Scotland so early as 1449, a law of James II.
Its beneficial influence, however, has been much obstructed by
entails; the heirs of entail being generally restrained from
letting leases for any long term of years, frequently for more
than one year. A late Act of Parliament has, in this respect,
somewhat slackened their fetters, though they are still by much
too strait. In Scotland, besides, as no leasehold gives a vote
for a Member of Parliament, the yeomanry are upon this account
less respectable to their landlords than in England.
In other parts of Europe, after it was found convenient to
secure tenants both against heirs and purchasers, the term of
their security was still limited to a very short period; in
France, for example, to nine years from the commencement of the
lease. It has in that country, indeed, been lately extended to
twenty-seven, a period still too short to encourage the tenant to
make the most important improvements. The proprietors of land
were anciently the legislators of every part of Europe. The laws
relating to land, therefore, were all calculated for what they
supposed the interest of the proprietor. It was for his interest,
they had imagined, that no lease granted by any of his
predecessors should hinder him from enjoying, during a long term
of years, the full value of his land. Avarice and injustice are
always short-sighted, and they did not foresee how much this
regulation must obstruct improvement, and thereby hurt in the
long-run the real interest of the landlord.
The farmers too, besides paying the rent, were anciently, it
was supposed, bound to perform a great number of services to the
landlord, which were seldom either specified in the lease, or
regulated by any precise rule, but by the use and wont of the
manor or barony. These services, therefore, being almost entirely
arbitrary, subjected the tenant to many vexations. In Scotland
the abolition of all services not precisely stipulated in the
lease has in the course of a few years very much altered for the
better the condition of the yeomanry of that country.
The public services to which the yeomanry were bound were
not less arbitrary than the private ones. To make and maintain
the high roads, a servitude which still subsists, I believe,
everywhere, though with different degrees of oppression in
different countries, was not the only one. When the king's
troops, when his household or his officers of any kind passed
through any part of the country, the yeomanry were bound to
provide them with horses, carriages, and provisions, at a price
regulated by the purveyor. Great Britain is, I believe, the only
monarchy in Europe where the oppression of purveyance has been
entirely abolished. It still subsists in France and Germany.
The public taxes to which they were subject were as
irregular and oppressive as the services. The ancient lords,
though extremely unwilling to grant themselves any pecuniary aid
to their sovereign, easily allowed him to tallage, as they called
it their tenants, and had not knowledge enough to foresee how
much this must in the end affect their own revenue. The taille,
as it still subsists in France, may serve as an example of those
ancient tallages. It is a tax upon the supposed profits of the
farmer, which they estimate by the stock that he has upon the
farm. It is his interest, therefore, to appear to have as little
as possible, and consequently to employ as little as possible in
its cultivation, and none in its improvement. Should any stock
happen to accumulate in the hands of a French farmer, the taille
is almost equal to a prohibition of its ever being employed upon
the land. This tax, besides, is supposed to dishonour whoever is
subject to it, and to degrade him below, not only the rank of a
gentleman, but that of a burgher, and whoever rents the lands of
another becomes subject to it. No gentleman, nor even any burgher
who has stock, will submit to this degradation. This tax,
therefore, not only hinders the stock which accumulates upon the
land from being employed in its improvement, but drives away an
other stock from it. The ancient tenths and fifteenths, so usual
in England in former times, seem, so far as they affected the
land, to have been taxes of the same nature with the taille.
Under all these discouragements, little improvement could be
expected from the occupiers of land. That order of people, with
all the liberty and security which law can give, must always
improve under great disadvantages. The farmer, compared with the
proprietor, is as a merchant who trades with borrowed money
compared with one who trades with his own. The stock of both may
improve, but that of the one, with only equal good conduct, must
always improve more slowly than that of the other, on account of
the large share of the profits which is consumed by the interest
of the loan. The lands cultivated by the farmer must, in the same
manner, with only equal good conduct, be improved more slowly
than those cultivated by the proprietor, on account of the large
share of the produce which is consumed in the rent, and which,
had the farmer been proprietor, he might have employed in the
further improvement of the land. The station of a farmer besides
is, from the nature of things, inferior to that of a proprietor.
Through the greater part of Europe the yeomanry are regarded as
an inferior rank of people, even to the better sort of tradesmen
and mechanics, and in all parts of Europe to the great merchants
and master manufacturers. It can seldom happen, therefore, that a
man of any considerable stock should quit the superior in order
to place himself in an inferior station. Even in the present
state of Europe, therefore, little stock is likely to go from any
other profession to the improvement of land in the way of
farming. More does perhaps in Great Britain than in any other
country, though even there the great stocks which are, in some
places, employed in farming have generally been acquired by
farming, the trade, perhaps, in which of all others stock is
commonly acquired most slowly. After small proprietors, however,
rich and great farmers are, in every country, the principal
improvers. There are more such perhaps in England than in any
other European monarchy. In the republican governments of Holland
and of Berne in Switzerland, the farmers are said to be not
inferior to those of England.
The ancient policy of Europe was, over and above all this,
unfavourable to the improvement and cultivation of land, whether
carried on by the proprietor or by the farmer; first, by the
general prohibition of the exportation of corn without a special
licence, which seems to have been a very universal regulation;
and secondly, by the restraints which were laid upon the inland
commerce, not only of corn, but of almost every other part of the
produce of the farm by the absurd laws against engrossers,
regrators, and forestallers, and by the privileges of fairs and
markets. It has already been observed in what manner the
prohibition of the exportation of corn, together with some
encouragement given to the importation of foreign corn,
obstructed the cultivation of ancient Italy, naturally the most
fertile country in Europe, and at that time the seat of the
greatest empire in the world. To what degree such restraints upon
the inland commerce of this commodity, joined to the general
prohibition of exportation, must have discouraged the cultivation
of countries less fertile and less favourably circumstanced, it
is not perhaps very easy to imagine.
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