Title: Selling food in the streets of London, c. 1600-1750
Abstract:This thesis considers the women and men who sold food in the streets, outside markets and
shops, in London between 1600 and 1750. Previous research has focused on hawking as a
crime, the poverty of st...This thesis considers the women and men who sold food in the streets, outside markets and
shops, in London between 1600 and 1750. Previous research has focused on hawking as a
crime, the poverty of street sellers, and their representation in contemporary culture. Instead,
this thesis combines social, cultural and economic history in a fuller study of the work of street
vending. The first four chapters are based on analysis of a database of street-selling individuals
and incidents, compiled from incidental archival descriptions, such as witness statements, and
local and citywide records of regulation. Having established the importance of street sellers to
the early modern capital, the last two chapters reassess the better-known evidence, the records
of civic authorities and the genre of prints, music and ballads known as the Cries. The thesis
shows that food hawkers were diverse Londoners who often ran sophisticated, substantial
businesses. Their work was integral to a dynamic, regional food system and supplied a broad
range of customers with perishable foods and small luxuries. Hawking food was a skilled form
of retailing, carried out in a busy street environment, and helped shape the space of the street.
London’s different authorities were largely tolerant of street vending and typically took action
when certain hawkers caused nuisances and disorder. The Cries should be appreciated as a
multimedia genre, which subverted formal conventions and satirised Londoners of all sorts.
This thesis makes particular contributions to our knowledge of the working poor, everyday
commerce, and the economy and culture of food in early modern England. It also proposes that
urban historians should give greater attention to the metropolitan working poor, suburban life,
and work outside formal trades. Street sellers make us reflect on what we mean by terms such as
‘street’, ‘city’ and ‘economy’.Read More
Publication Year: 2020
Publication Date: 2020-01-01
Language: en
Type: dissertation
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