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The Persistence of Open-Field Farming in Nineteenth-Century France
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2010
Abstract
The enclosure of the open fields is an example of Europeans' willingness to alter long-standing social and economic institutions in the interest of higher living standards. In Scandinavia, England, and Germany the rise in the value of enclosed relative to unenclosed land induced widespread abandonment of open-field forms of agrarian organization by the middle of the nineteenth century. In France, on the other hand, the traditional patterns of landholding maintained themselves until after the First World War. This paper examines some of the ways French farmers responded to the possibilities of agricultural change within the traditional framework of open-field agriculture.
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References
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23 This estimate is based on calculations of the income obtainable from 6 sheep and a cow taken from data in the census manuscripts of the 1862 agricultural census. Six sheep would yield wool and meat (assuming sheep were killed at 4 years) worth 40 francs a year. A cow in milk and bearing one calf would yield about 150 to 160 francs a year. The income of a rural landless family at this time would.have ranged from 800 to 1000 francs. See Ministere de l'Agriculture, Statistique de la France… risuhats giniraux de I'enquete dicennale de 1862 (Strasbourg, 1868)Google Scholar. Detailed calculations for the departments of Eure-et-Loir and Yonne were made from the manuscripts, Enquete agricole dicennale, 1862: questionnaires cantonnaux. Archives Nationales, Paris, F 2693–2697Google Scholar.
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25 Berthelin, Egmont, Usages locaux encore en vigueur dans le département de la Marne (Chalons, 1857), p. 84Google Scholar; Antoine Grandveau, Usages locaux du département de la Marne, 2nd ed. (rpt. of 1855 usages; Bar-le-Duc, 1922), p. 38; Bouthors, Alexandre, Les Usages locaux du dèpartement de la Somme, prictáts d'un essai d'application des usages ruraux du nord de la France au projet de code rural (Amiens, 1861), pp. 70–73Google Scholar; Loiret, Département du, Recueil des usages locaux (Orléans, 1905), p. 18Google Scholar. In others a light picket fence or a furrow marked off the area to be withdrawn from common pasture. See, for example, , Henault, Usages locaux d'Eure-et-Loir (1861), p. 204Google Scholar; Bourgueil, La vaine pature (rpt. of 1855 usages of the départment of Ardennes), pp. 101, 107; and , Berthelin, Usages locaux de I'Aube, p. 65Google Scholar.
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30 The correlation between the percentage of farms over 40 hectares in size and the percentage of farms held on leasehold tenure as reported in the 1862 agricultural census is.47.
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33 Peltre, “Les Remembrements.”
34 Marmottan, Paul, “Un Projet de Code Rural sous de ler Empire,” Revue des etudes napoleon-iennes, 6 (1913), 321–46Google Scholar.
35 , Sée, “La Vaine Pature sous la Monarchie de Juillet,” pp. 198–213Google Scholar.
36 Napoleon III appointed a commission to study a reformulation of the Code Rural in 1855. Articles on the German states' legislation facilitating consolidation (flurbereinigung) began to appear at the end of the 1850s.
37 This is well brought out in the debates conducted in the Corps Legislatif over the authority of the syndicat autorisée. See Le Moniteur universelle, 1865, pp. 628–29Google Scholar. A full account is to be found in , Van-dervynct, Le Remembrement, pp. 134–36Google Scholar; and , Colonna, La Petite Propriété, p. 128Google Scholar.
38 Zeldin, Theodore, France 1848–1945, Vol. I, Ambition, Love and Politics (Oxford, 1973), pp. 522 -23, 530–31CrossRefGoogle Scholar. In 1890 per capita debt incurred by local authorities in France was 37 francs, excluding the large towns. In England local authorities indebted their citizens to the amount of 180 francs per head; Ibid., p. 524.
39 In contrast, American state governments were almost indecent in their readiness to expropriate private property for purposes of economic development. See Scheiber, Harry N., “Property Law, Expropriation, and Resource Allocation by Government: The United States, 1789–1910,” this Journal, 33 (03 1973), 232–51Google Scholar.
40 In this and the preceding paragraph I follow David Thomson's interpretation of post-Revolutionary French politics as an expression of the tension between the Revolutionary ideal of popular sovereignty in an omnicompetent state, with overtones of social as well as political egalitarianism, and the embodiment of this ideal in ministerial government. The question to whom the executive was to be responsible was never adequately resolved, with the result that in 1791, 1830, and 1848 governments were changed by popular uprisings. See his Democracy in France since 1870, 4th ed. (London, 1964), pp. 13–14Google Scholar. For a similar verdict, see Hoffmann's, Stanley brilliant analysis of the “stalemate society” in “Paradoxes of the French Political Community,” in Hoffmann, et al., In Search of France (Cambridge, Mass., 1963), pp. 12–18Google Scholar.
41 , Grandeau, Agriculture et les institutions agricole, vol. 3, p. 133Google Scholar.
42 , Vandervynct, Le Remembrement, p. 175Google Scholar.
43 , Zeldin, France, vol. I, pp. 582–84Google Scholar. Deputies in the Third Republic were professional agents of their districts in Paris, and owed their election more to their ability to provide patronage and small-scale public works than to their stand on “national” issues. General elections were infrequent and the turnover of deputies was very low. At any time in early twentieth century, over a quarter of them had served more than 20 years. Thus the frequent turnover of governments was matched by the infrequency of changes in the personnel of the Assembled Nationale. The deputies could thus block strong executive actions, while their hold on patronage prevented the emergence of a “ministerial party” that might have provided some room for government to maneuver.
44 , Chauveau, Remembrement, pp. 40, 102–03Google Scholar; , Grandeau, Les Institutions agricole, vol. 3, p. 128Google Scholar; , Vandervynct, Le Remembrement, p. 168Google Scholar. The numbers of consolidations actually carried out are impossible to determine, owing to the apparently common device of exchange in leasehold, as discussed above. There is no question, however, that consolidation of land by sale and exchange was very rare. On the eve of the First World War Chauveau estimated that only one commune (probably Teuton-ville) had taken advantage of an 1865 law making it possible for landowners to form themselves into a syndicate for the purpose of carrying out consolidation of their land. The number of resurveys of open-field villages combined with a reduction in the number of parcels and a reorientation of paths seems to have been under one hundred. See , Grandeau, L'Agriculture et les institutions agricole, vol. 3, p. 128Google Scholar. Hottenger lists the communes having carried out full or partial abornements generaux in Morcellement, Appendix.
45 “The Consolidation of Farms in Six Countries of Western Europe,” International Journal of Agrarian Affairs, 1 (1952), 25–28Google Scholar; , Barral, Les Agrariens frangais, pp. 199, 258Google Scholar.
46 Valentin, Lucien, L'Action administrative dans la vie rurale (Paris, 1961)Google Scholar.
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