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245 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2001
Late medieval England was not a welfare society. That did not happen until the application of the Elizabethan poor laws in the 1580s which, however, treated the able-bodied poor as prisoners in workhouses and gave the rest starvation-level aid. By a broader and more humane definition the English welfare state did not begin until the Labor government of 1945-51, and Margaret Thatcher would have loved late-fourteenth-century and fifteenth-centry England.