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1 - 10 of 11 search results for katalk:za33 24 |u:www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk where 0 match all words and 11 match some words.
  1. Results that match 1 of 2 words

  2. 1 Clockmakers, Milliners and Mistresses: Women Trading in the ...

    https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/research/occupations/outputs/preliminary/paper16.pdf
    18 Jan 2010: 24 Malachy Postlethwayt, The Universal Dictionary of Trade and Commerce, 4th edn, 1764, vol. ... Westminster St Paul Covent Garden. He was not a member of the Clockmakers' Company, and indeed was only 24 years old at the time of marriage.
  3. 16appendix

    https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/research/occupations/outputs/preliminary/paper16appendix.pdf
    18 Jan 2010: 3 Listed from 1705-24 as a head dresser, from 1727-42 as a milliner.
  4. 3 The Occupational Structure of England c.1710 to 1871.

    https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/research/projects/occupations/britain19c/papers/paper3.pdf
    10 May 2010: Sector. SAMPLE c.1710. Correction factor. TOTAL c.1710. % %Primary 20.2 1.2 24.1Secondary 42.5 0.8 34.5Tertiary 15.4 1.2 17.4Labourers 22.0 ... c.1710 1817 1851% % %. Primary 24.1 14.9 14.6Secondary 34.5 39.2 40.1Tertiary 17.4 17.2 23.1Labourers 24.0
  5. 4 The occupational structure of England and Wales c.1817 to 1881 -…

    https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/research/projects/occupations/britain19c/papers/paper4.pdf
    10 May 2010: 9. reason to think that from 1851 on this distinction was drawn fairly accurately.18 In 1851, as high a proportion as 24 percent of labourers were not agricultural. ... 23 See, Kitson et al, ‘The creation.’ 24 See: Shaw-Taylor et al, The occupational
  6. 5 The occupational structure of England and Wales c.1750 to 1911

    https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/research/projects/occupations/britain19c/papers/paper5.pdf
    10 May 2010: p.143-5. Nef, J.U. ‘The progress of technology and the growth of large-scale industry’, p.24. ... There has been much debate over the purported under-enumeration of women’s work in the nineteenth century census.24 However, much of the literature is
  7. 7 Tracking change over time

    https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/research/projects/occupations/britain19c/papers/paper7.pdf
    10 May 2010: trivial, a decline from 27.3 per cent to 24.4 per cent.
  8. Creating a ‘census’ of male occupations for England and Wales in 1817

    https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/research/projects/occupations/britain19c/papers/paper2.pdf
    12 May 2010: 876 0.03 99 0.07 975 0.04 unread 0.10 78 0.06 2,673 0.10 Total 131,892 5.24 6,567 4.88 138,459 ... Ade. 24 The parish register gives the following occupational breakdown: 19% primary, 27% secondary, 13% tertiary, 42% labourers and 0% servants.
  9. englandfemale

    https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/research/occupations/outputs/preliminary/paper18.pdf
    19 Apr 2010: or 24%).2 The largest number of these (11, all but one women with children) were recorded as 'chairwoman'. ... 24 Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies, Byram Estate and Farm, accounts, 1769-77, D/RA/4B/3.
  10. The decline of adult smallpox in eighteenth century London\205)

    https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/people/davenport/davenport8.pdf
    24 Oct 2010: 24 McKeown, Modern rise, pp. 11-13, 107-8 25 Decadal burial totals were: 6,490 (1752-59), 8,462 (1760-69) 10,011 (1770-79) 10,203 (1780-89), ... 24. the average age at infection in rural areas, and could have had a similar effect in London,.
  11. The economic development of Sussex c

    https://www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/research/occupations/outputs/preliminary/dissertationwalker.pdf
    26 Jul 2010: hundreds, 1761-1851. Figure 5: Occupational structural development in nineteenth-century 24. Sussex. ... 24 Graphs of the occupational structure of agricultural and industrial counties presented by L.

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