2018
DOI: 10.18352/tseg.946
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Tall Farmers and Tiny Weavers. Rural Living Standards and Heights in Flanders, 1830-1870.

Abstract: The evolution of the average stature of convicts between 1830 and 1870 in the prisons of Ghent and Bruges is used as a measure of the biological standard of living and suggests progress in the quality of life in the Flemish countryside, particularly for children born after 1850. Heights are used to shed light on regional variations. Prisoners born in coastal Flanders were on average shorter than inmates born in inland Flanders. Heights furthermore provide a key to discovering specific socio-economic difference… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…See, for example, Baten and Murray, ‘Heights of men and women’; Carson, ‘Health during industrialization’; de Beer, ‘Physical stature’; Horrell, Meredith, and Oxley, ‘Measuring misery’; Inwood, Maxwell‐Stewart, Oxley, and Stankovich, ‘Growing incomes’. For Belgium: Depauw, ‘Tall farmers and tiny weavers’.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…See, for example, Baten and Murray, ‘Heights of men and women’; Carson, ‘Health during industrialization’; de Beer, ‘Physical stature’; Horrell, Meredith, and Oxley, ‘Measuring misery’; Inwood, Maxwell‐Stewart, Oxley, and Stankovich, ‘Growing incomes’. For Belgium: Depauw, ‘Tall farmers and tiny weavers’.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%