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412 History


WHY DID CHANGES TAKE PLACE IN FARMING?
At this time there was a new interest in science and
technology. Many old crafts were becoming modern
industries and farming was no exception. This was
necessary, as cities were growing and their populations
needed more food. In France, an inefficient farming
system had resulted in famine and political unrest.

Agricultural Revolution

The 18th and 19th centuries saw


great changes in Europe and North


America in the way people farmed.


Scientific methods were used to


improve crop yields and breed better


livestock.. MECHANIZATION made


farming more efficient.


4 SEED DRILL
Seeds had been scattered by hand until Jethro
Tull’s seed drill (developed in about 1701)
made it possible to plant seeds in rows,
which could then be easily hoed.

Seed placed here
passed down
the tube

1 BRINGERS OF CHANGE
Landowners wishing to improve their estates were at the forefront of
change. They experimented with new breeds of cattle, and also learned
how to change crops year by year to preserve the goodness of the soil.

AGRICULTURAL SHOWS 3
The Royal Agricultural Society meets at Bristol, England, in


  1. After 1838, the Society helped to spread knowledge of
    crops, livestock breeding, and new machinery among farmers.


DID MACHINES REPLACE PEOPLE?
These new inventions were brought in to make
farming easier and also to reduce costs. By the 1830s,
English farm labourers were beginning to worry that
mechanization would lead to loss of jobs. They
protested by smashing new machinery and burning
hay ricks. Their fears were founded. In the next 150
years, the number of farm workers declined rapidly.

In the 1800s, new machines, such as reaping
and threshing machines, were invented to do
jobs that had previously been done by hand.

MECHANIZATION


WHO WORKED
ON THE LAND?
In many parts of Europe, farming had
changed very little since the Middle
Ages. Peasants laboured in the fields in
great poverty and often had little freedom
to move away from their villages. In Britain,
farm work was increasingly carried out by
large numbers of low-waged labourers.

FIND OUT MORE. Early Farming 364–365 • Ecology 80–81


THOMAS WILLIAM COKE
1752–1842
Thomas Coke was one of the
new landowners determined
to improve agriculture. He
replaced rye with wheat on his
land in Norfolk, England, and
bred cattle, sheep, and pigs.
He also became a Member
of Parliament.

Agricultural
Revolution
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