medieval-atlas/economic-development/307
Transcription
Burgh/arms Perth possibly had a feufarm of 240 marks under Robert I, but its levels. This is as clear an indication as it is possible to find of an prosperity was wrecked by the English occupation of the 1330s, absolute decline in both size and prosperity. which, in lesser degree, so damaged most of the Scottish burghs. War and plague combined to produce a long period of Perth did not farm its revenues again untill375, and then for a feu stagnation. Feufarms became increasingly common. Dundee's was of only 120 marks. Apart from the already established feufarms of fixed in l365. Inverness and Montrosefollowed in 1370. By the end Aberdeen and Edinburgh, the farms of all burghs other than Banff of the fourteenth century almost all the burghs making regular and Inverness tumbled and never recovered to their earliest recorded returns to the Exchequer were operating feufarms. Northern' Central Crail Q 0 [J Q P'l [7) G Q 0 [7) Dundee f21 rJ ~ £300 Forfar ~ la E2 B1 ESj I!SI 0 I:Transcribers who have contributed to this page.
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Aberdeenshire County, Angus County, Argyll County, Ayrshire County, Banffshire County, Berwickshire County, Buteshire County, Caithness County, Clackmannanshire County, Cromarty County, Dumfriesshire County, Dunbartonshire County, East Lothian County, Fife County, Inverness-shire County, Kincardineshire County, Kinross-shire County, Kirkcudbrightshire County, Lanarkshire County, Midlothian County, Morayshire County, Nairnshire County, Orkney County, Peeblesshire County, Perthshire County, Renfrewshire County, Ross County, Ross And Cromarty County, Roxburghshire County, Selkirkshire County, Shetland County, Stirlingshire County, Sutherland County, West Lothian County, Wigtownshire County