The Heavy Plow as an Agent of Social Change
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This case study explores how the introduction of the heavy plow during medieval Britain reshaped not only agricultural production but also social structure and community life. The case demonstrates how this apparently simple technological innovation enabled deeper plowing in heavy, clay-rich soils of northern Europe, increasing arable land by more than two times and improving food security. In addition to being an implement, the heavy plow stimulated new forms of labor organization and communal cooperation among peasants, who had to pool oxen teams and coordinate plowing operations. These cooperative practices became the foundation of more complex social institutions and communal cohesion, reshaping relationships of power between landowners and peasants. The book argues that technology—particularly in rural and pre-industrial societies—needs to be conceptualized not simply as an efficiency driver but as a force capable of reshaping economic relationships and cultural norms. It challenges the students to think about how technology constructs society and how shifts in material practice can have ripple effects which run through social hierarchies, gender distinctions, and systems of governance. By unpacking the role of the heavy plow in medieval socio-technical change, the case provides a foundation for exploring how so-called "low-tech" innovations can be deep causes of long-term change.