ACADEMIC JOURNAL
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ISSN 2542-1077 (Print) ISSN 1994-5973 (Online) |
World history |
Savenkova I. Yu. | Luhansk State Pedagogical University |
Keywords: England Tudors monopoly parliament patent British Crown |
Summary: The relevance of the research is determined by the problem of monopolism in modern economy. It has
great theoretical and practical significance because in the realization of their economic interests monopolistic associations
usually hinder the development of market relations as such and produce crisis. In this respect it is expedient to turn
to the historical past and parse an example of how this problem was solved then. The aim of this article is to investigate
the principal problem of England’s social and economic development in the second part of the XVI century, which was
a struggle in the Parliament around trade monopolies and patent policy of the Crown. It was established that causa
proxima that forced the Parliament’s decision to introduce a monopoly question for debate was numerous abuses of
patents’ owners. It caused numerous complaints of those merchants who could not obtain a certain patent for some
reasons. The debates about the harm of monopolies lasted from 1597 up to 1601, when the House of Commons considered
the antimonopoly bill, and Queen Elizabeth I ordained the proclamation in which she renounced her right to give
new monopolies in a future. It is demonstrated that as a result the parliament did not go as far as to infringe the Crown’s prerogative to give merchants patents and did not pass the relevant bill. The status of the existing monopolies remained unchanged. |
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