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The development of technology in farming equipment combined with the increase in available farmland and a favorable climate drove the British Agricultural Revolution. This was an important start because it was the beginning of many of the strategies used in today's agricultural world.
It didn't happen in a single year, but a gradual change of many things over a period of time. The British Agricultural Revolution describes a period of development in Britain between the 17th century and the end of the 19th century, which saw a massive increase in agricultural productivity and net output. This in turn supported unprecedented population growth, freeing up a significant percentage of the workforce, and thereby helped drive the Industrial Revolution. How this came about is not entirely clear. In recent decades, enclosure, mechanization, four-field crop rotation, and selective breeding have been highlighted as primary causes, with credit given to relatively few individuals.
It created extra wealth for the purchase of consumer goods.-appex
In 1825, around 80% of the British population lived and worked in the countryside. The Industrial Revolution was beginning to shift the population towards urban areas, but a significant majority still relied on agricultural activities for their livelihoods.
Wealthy landowners, began buying up much of the land that village farmers had once worked. The large landowners dramatically improved farming methods. These innovations amounted to an agricultural revolution.
some Colonials wanted to stay under british rule
By the increase in restrictions by the British on the American economy?
It resulted in more rural British workers moving to urban centers.
In England the agricultural revolution led to massive changes in the organisation and mechanisation of farming. The American revolution had significant consequences for the British Empire and encouraged the French people to believe that tyranny could be challenged. The French Revolution resulted in the abolition of the monarchy and the feudal system in France.
the increase in tobacco production
It wasn't a civil war. In a civil war the population fight each other, but the revolution the enemy was the British soldiers and the king.
The industrial revolution in Great Britain greatly increased productivity and expanded its wealth and the populations's purchasing power. These two factors constantly outweighed the increase in population numbers. The nation's population rose from 10.5 million in 1801 to 42 million by 1911. This amounted to an annual increase of about 1.25% per year. In contrast to this, its national product rose much faster. Estimates on the growth of gross national product run as high as 2.5%. By 1911, Britain's power in the world was sustained and increased dramatically.