The Rise of England 189
In this seventeenth-century woodcut, a country wife engages in domestic
industry, part of the expansion of textile manufacturing that transformed
England’s economy.
1590s, a decade in which popular tax rebellions shook France, Spain, Aus
tria, and Ukraine, among other places, and again in the 1620s and 1630s.
England’s exceptional economic development drew upon the country’s
natural resources, including iron, timber, and, above all, coal, extracted in
far greater quantities than anywhere on the continent. New industrial meth
ods expanded the production of iron, brass, and pewter in and around Birm
ingham. But, primarily, textile manufacturing developed the English
economy. Woolens (which accounted for about 80 percent of exports),
worsteds (sturdy yarn spun from combed wool fibers), and cloth found eager
buyers in England as well as on the continent. Moreover, late in the six
teenth century, as English merchants began making forays across the
Atlantic, these textiles were also sold in the New World. Cloth manufactur
ers undercut production by urban craftsmen by “putting out’’ work to the vil
lages and farms of the countryside. In such domestic industry, poor rural
women and girls could do spinning and carding (combing fibers in prepara
tion for spinning) of wool in their homes.
The English textile trade was closely tied to Antwerp, where workers
dyed English cloth. Sir Thomas Gresham, a sixteenth-century entrepre
neur, became England’s representative in the bustling river port. Wining
and dining the city’s merchants and serving as a royal ambassador, he so
enhanced the reputation of English merchants that they could operate on
credit, no small achievement in the sixteenth century. At home, he con
vinced the government to end special privileges accorded the Hanseatic