Does the prosperity of medieval manors depend on their position in the feudal system? How large are these effects? And what are the underlying economic mechanisms? Using Domesday Book, a unique country-wide survey conducted by William the Conqueror, we reinterpret the eleventh-century English feudal system as a network in which manors are linked to one another based on their common ownership structure. Both a reduced-form and a more structural approach reveal the existence of external economies of scale: manorial prosperity was closely intertwined with the fortune of feudal peers. Our findings quantitatively establish the existence of feudal coordination in High-Medieval agricultural activities, revealing how institutionalized interactions could serve to mitigate transaction costs.
CITATION STYLE
Delabastita, V., & Maes, S. (2023). The Feudal Origins of Manorial Prosperity: Social Interactions in Eleventh-Century England. Journal of Economic History, 83(2), 464–500. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050723000116
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