Enlightenment · Europe · Politics
1696
Window Tax Introduced in England
1696
William III's government imposed a tax on houses according to the number of windows, believing it an easy way to tax wealth without requiring income returns. Many homeowners promptly bricked up windows to reduce their assessment, which is why so many English houses have blank panels in their facades. The tax endured for over a century and a half before its repeal in 1851.