Renaissance · Europe · Politics

1601

Elizabethan Poor Law

1601

Parliament codified a patchwork of Tudor charities into a national system compelling parishes to tax property owners for the relief of their own poor. Overseers distributed bread and apprenticed orphans. The law would shape English welfare, with grudging tweaks, until the workhouses of the nineteenth century, establishing the principle that poverty was a public responsibility rather than merely a private sin.