skip to primary navigation skip to content
 

 

service « Top of the Campops: 60 things you didn't know about family, marriage, work, and death since the middle ages

Top of the Campops: 60 things you didn't know about family, marriage, work, and death since the middle ages

Skip to blog menu ▼

Posts Tagged ‘service’

Five reasons why service in the past was not like Downton Abbey

Thursday, March 6th, 2025

Charmian Mansell 

When Downton Abbey first aired on 26 September 2010, the public was immediately hooked. It wasn’t just the glamour, the affluence, and the scandals of the aristocratic Crawley family living in the big house that drew viewers in. It was also the cast of servants working tirelessly below stairs that captivated audiences.  

The show gave airtime to the lives of men and women who lit fires, carried luggage, mopped floors, cooked food, served food, made beds, and did laundry, all in the service of the Earl and Countess of Grantham and their three daughters. 

Downton Abbey dramatizes service in the Crawley’s country house in the early 20th century. But what if we turn the clock back a few hundred years? What was service like in the centuries before Downton? Here are five ways in which pre-industrial English service was not as Mr Carson (the butler), Anna (the lady’s maid), or Daisy (the kitchen maid), experienced it. 

(more…)

The growth of the service sector

Thursday, January 16th, 2025

Leigh Shaw-Taylor 

The service sector, also known as the tertiary sector, comprises all workers not making a physical product. This includes shopkeepers, wholesalers, publicans, hotel workers, people working in financial services, health and social care workers, professional services, and transport workers. 

The UK economy today, like that of all rich countries, is dominated by the service or tertiary sector. According to the 2021 census, fully 76 percent of the labour force is now in the tertiary sector. But when did the service sector become dominant, and when did it begin to grow? Many people think the growth of the service sector is a recent phenomenon, starting perhaps in the 1950s and picking up speed as Britain de-industrialised from the 1970s. However, new long-run data on male occupations collected by the Occupational Structure of Britain c.1379-1911 project tell a different story. 

(more…)

« Home
  • Recent posts

  • Pages

  • Archive

  • Tags

  • age at marriage agricultural revolution baby boom coal coverture dearth demographic transition demography economic history English peasants European marriage pattern extended family family history family size family tree famine fertility fossil fuels genealogies households hunger illegitimacy industrial revolution marriage marriage age medieval medieval history migration mortality naming practices non-marital fertility occupational structure occupations old age old people poor laws population size service social history surnames urbanisation women's employment women's history women's wages women's work