Citation
Jennings, Julia A.; Wood, James W.; & Johnson, Patricia L. (2011). Household-Level Predictors of the Presence of Servants in Northern Orkney, Scotland, 1851-1901. The History of the Family: An International Quarterly, 16(3), 278-291. PMCID: PMC3172135Abstract
Servants were an important part of the northwestern European household economy in the preindustrial past. This study examines household-level characteristics that are predictive of the presence of rural servants using data from Orkney, Scotland. The number of servants present in a household is related to household composition, landholding size, and the marital status of the household head. In addition, the sex of the particular servant hired reveals that the labor of male and female servants is not fungible. The sex of the servant hired is related to the ratio of male and female household members of working age, the occupation of the head, household composition, and the size of the household's landholding.URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.hisfam.2011.01.002Reference Type
Journal ArticleYear Published
2011Journal Title
The History of the Family: An International QuarterlyAuthor(s)
Jennings, Julia A.Wood, James W.
Johnson, Patricia L.