Abstract
Since the late 1980s historians of the family have been interested in the
socio-demographic analysis of the role of domestic service in European
societies during the Ancien Régime. These scholars have been concerned
with the consequences of life-cycle service since it appeared that a
significant proportion of Europe's inhabitants were in service at some
point in their lives. This proportion was highest in countries of
Northwestern Europe, such as England, where between 10 and 12 per cent
of the population worked as servants, usually while young, moving readily
from one household to another. This process began at an early age,
around adolescence, and tended to end with a change in occupation,
generally just before entering into marriage, in other words, prior to
forming a separate family unit. By relating the mobility of servants to the
specific characteristics of the marriage-formation model, historians have
been able to highlight the contribution of domestic service to social and
familial reproduction. Encouraged by their results, the next step for
social historians was to elaborate an explanatory model of this system of
family reproduction. Although the model offered was derived from the
behaviour of a concrete social and demographic structure which was
basically Northern European, it was nonetheless presented as the principal
model for all of Western Europe.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Social Sciences,History
Cited by
12 articles.
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