Environmental Influences on Young Adult Male Height. A Comparison of Town and Countryside in the Netherlands, 1815-1900

The first phase of industrialization has often been associated with decreasing standards of living for workers, and early industrial towns and cities gained bad reputations. One of the best indicators for living conditions in early life is young adult height, and the literature has often pointed at...

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Main Authors: Jan Kok, Erik Beekink, David Bijsterbosch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Instititute of Social History 2017-09-01
Series:Historical Life Course Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://test.openjournals.nl/hlcs/article/view/9330
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spelling doaj-686667eb89c141bda1114b0c30f530b22021-05-04T10:12:40ZengInternational Instititute of Social HistoryHistorical Life Course Studies2352-63432017-09-016Environmental Influences on Young Adult Male Height. A Comparison of Town and Countryside in the Netherlands, 1815-1900Jan KokErik BeekinkDavid Bijsterbosch The first phase of industrialization has often been associated with decreasing standards of living for workers, and early industrial towns and cities gained bad reputations. One of the best indicators for living conditions in early life is young adult height, and the literature has often pointed at urban-rural differences in heights to illustrate the initial decrease of living standards due to urbanization and industrialization. But how was urban residence connected to height? Causal mechanisms can include disease environment related to crowdedness, food availability or the nature of urban versus rural work. But perhaps urban-rural differences can simply be attributed to compositional effects, e.g. in cities relatively more poor, illiterate or incomplete families were to be found. Another question is whether urban-rural differences are limited to large cities compared to the rest, or whether we also find differences between towns and villages. In this brief, exploratory paper, we combine two detailed local datasets to provide answers to these questions. We contrast an early industrializing town, with a typical proletarian sub-culture of tile bakers and a significant middle class (Woerden in the province of South-Holland) to an agrarian community (the village of Akersloot and surrounding area in the province of North-Holland). Our dataset allows us to disentangle effects of the family composition, the family’s socio-economic status, food prices, and the environment on bodily growth of 1,738 young men. Our results suggest that the specific conditions of urban workers were more important for the physical development of their children than the urban or rural setting itself. https://test.openjournals.nl/hlcs/article/view/933019th CenturyHollandResource dilutionAnthropometric historyUrban-rural differences
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jan Kok
Erik Beekink
David Bijsterbosch
spellingShingle Jan Kok
Erik Beekink
David Bijsterbosch
Environmental Influences on Young Adult Male Height. A Comparison of Town and Countryside in the Netherlands, 1815-1900
Historical Life Course Studies
19th Century
Holland
Resource dilution
Anthropometric history
Urban-rural differences
author_facet Jan Kok
Erik Beekink
David Bijsterbosch
author_sort Jan Kok
title Environmental Influences on Young Adult Male Height. A Comparison of Town and Countryside in the Netherlands, 1815-1900
title_short Environmental Influences on Young Adult Male Height. A Comparison of Town and Countryside in the Netherlands, 1815-1900
title_full Environmental Influences on Young Adult Male Height. A Comparison of Town and Countryside in the Netherlands, 1815-1900
title_fullStr Environmental Influences on Young Adult Male Height. A Comparison of Town and Countryside in the Netherlands, 1815-1900
title_full_unstemmed Environmental Influences on Young Adult Male Height. A Comparison of Town and Countryside in the Netherlands, 1815-1900
title_sort environmental influences on young adult male height. a comparison of town and countryside in the netherlands, 1815-1900
publisher International Instititute of Social History
series Historical Life Course Studies
issn 2352-6343
publishDate 2017-09-01
description The first phase of industrialization has often been associated with decreasing standards of living for workers, and early industrial towns and cities gained bad reputations. One of the best indicators for living conditions in early life is young adult height, and the literature has often pointed at urban-rural differences in heights to illustrate the initial decrease of living standards due to urbanization and industrialization. But how was urban residence connected to height? Causal mechanisms can include disease environment related to crowdedness, food availability or the nature of urban versus rural work. But perhaps urban-rural differences can simply be attributed to compositional effects, e.g. in cities relatively more poor, illiterate or incomplete families were to be found. Another question is whether urban-rural differences are limited to large cities compared to the rest, or whether we also find differences between towns and villages. In this brief, exploratory paper, we combine two detailed local datasets to provide answers to these questions. We contrast an early industrializing town, with a typical proletarian sub-culture of tile bakers and a significant middle class (Woerden in the province of South-Holland) to an agrarian community (the village of Akersloot and surrounding area in the province of North-Holland). Our dataset allows us to disentangle effects of the family composition, the family’s socio-economic status, food prices, and the environment on bodily growth of 1,738 young men. Our results suggest that the specific conditions of urban workers were more important for the physical development of their children than the urban or rural setting itself.
topic 19th Century
Holland
Resource dilution
Anthropometric history
Urban-rural differences
url https://test.openjournals.nl/hlcs/article/view/9330
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