Carus-Wilson, Eleanora - Historian Profiles - Making History.
WILSON, William Wilson Carus (1764-1851), of Casterton Hall, Kirkby Lonsdale, Westmld. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1820-1832, ed. D.R. Fisher, 2009 Available from Cambridge University Press.
Description: The Economic History Review publishes articles based on original research on all aspects of economic and social history.The Review is edited on behalf of the Economic History Society by leading scholars. It has been published since 1927 and is one of the world's leading journals in the field.
N McKendrick 'Josiah Wedgwood: an Eighteenth-Century Entrepreneur in Salesmanship and Marketing Techniques', The economic history review., 2nd ser, XII, 1960, reprinted in E M Carus-Wilson, ed, Essays in Economic History, III, 1962. Peter Borsay A history of leisure: the British experience since 1500 Basingstoke, 2006.
History. By the 15th century, English law had awarded limited liability to monastic communities and trade guilds with commonly held property. In the 17th century, joint stock charters were awarded by the crown to monopolies such as the East India Company. The world's first modern limited liability law was enacted by the state of New York in 1811. In England it became more straightforward to.
The water-mill, though known in the Roman Empire from the second century BCE, did not come to enjoy any widespread use until the 4th or 5th centuries CE, and then chiefly in the West, which was then experiencing not only a rapid decline in the supply of slaves, but also widespread depopulation, and thus a severe scarcity of labour. For the West -- those regions that came to form Europe -- the.
Carus-Wilson, E. M. (Eleanora Mary), 1897-1977 Carus-Wilson, Eleanora Mary, 1897-1977 Carus-Wilson, Eleanora Mary Carus-Wilson, E. M. 1897-1977 Eleanora Carus-Wilson historienne canadienne-britannique.
Limited liability is a concept whereby a person's financial liability is limited to a fixed sum, most commonly the value of a person's investment in a company or partnership with limited liability. If a company with limited liability is sued, then the plaintiffs are suing the company, not its owners or investors. A shareholder in a limited company is not personally liable for any of the debts.