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Top 10 Most-Cited Articles


These are the top 10 most-cited articles for this title for the previous two years. Most-cited rankings are updated on a monthly basis and provided by CrossRef.

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Empowered or marginalized? Rural women and credit in later thirteenth- and fourteenth-century England

CHRIS BRIGGS

Continuity and Change, Volume 19, Issue 01, May 2004, pp 13-43
doi: 10.1017/S0268416004004928 (About doi), Published online by Cambridge University Press 07 Jul 2004
 

Multigenerational families in nineteenth-century America

STEVEN RUGGLES

Continuity and Change, Volume 18, Issue 01, May 2003, pp 139-165
doi: 10.1017/S0268416003004466 (About doi), Published online by Cambridge University Press 05 Aug 2003
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Micro-credit, misappropriation and morality: British responses to Irish distress, 1822–1831

CRAIG BAILEY

Continuity and Change, Volume 21, Issue 03, Dec 2006, pp 455-474
doi: 10.1017/S0268416006006047 (About doi), Published online by Cambridge University Press 29 Jan 2007
 

Single women in early modern England: attitudes and expectations

CHRISTINE PETERS

Continuity and Change, Volume 12, Issue 03, Dec 1997, pp 325-345
doi: 10.1017/S0268416097002993 (About doi),
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Poverty, old age and gender in nineteenth-century England: the case of Hertfordshire

NIGEL GOOSE

Continuity and Change, Volume 20, Issue 03, Dec 2005, pp 351-384
doi: 10.1017/S0268416005005618 (About doi), Published online by Cambridge University Press 17 Feb 2006
 

Infant feeding practices and infant mortality in England, 1900–1919

VALERIE FILDES

Continuity and Change, Volume 13, Issue 02, Aug 1998, pp 251-280
doi: 10.1017/S0268416098003166 (About doi),
 

Bastardy and the Great Famine: Ireland, 1845–1850

LIAM KENNEDY

Continuity and Change, Volume 14, Issue 03, Dec 1999, pp 429-452
doi: 10.1017/S0268416099003410 (About doi),
 

Historical and present-day child labour: is there a gap or a bridge between them?

MARJATTA RAHIKAINEN

Continuity and Change, Volume 16, Issue 01, May 2001, pp 137-156
doi: 10.1017/S0268416001003721 (About doi), Published online by Cambridge University Press 15 Jun 2001
 

‘Dishonourable’ youth, guilds, and the changed world view of sex, illegitimacy, and women in late-sixteenth-century Germany

MARIA R. BOES

Continuity and Change, Volume 18, Issue 03, Dec 2003, pp 345-372
doi: 10.1017/S0268416003004697 (About doi), Published online by Cambridge University Press 11 Feb 2004
 

The origins of the children of the London Foundling Hospital, 1741–1760: a reconsideration

ALYSA LEVENE

Continuity and Change, Volume 18, Issue 02, Aug 2003, pp 201-235
doi: 10.1017/S0268416003004594 (About doi), Published online by Cambridge University Press 12 Nov 2003
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