Entry tags:
The cow standard
For the Tooth and Claw game dragons eat a LOT of meat, so I think that I have to assume that the average wage will pay for e.g. a cow every few days, and that meat in general will be cheap whereas some types of food (e.g. bread, cheese) either won't be on sale at all, or will be a niche market catering to foreign (human) tourists and foodys. What I want to do is work out things adventurers might want to buy - e.g. beer, guns, etc. - based on the thing I know - e.g. cows.
What I really need is some idea of the cost of a beef carcasse in the mid-Victorian era. I can then relate other prices I know to that. Presumably information like this is available, but I've not got very far - I got a victorian maths text that gave three different prices for a cow in three different sums, but I'm pretty sure that there is no real world connection, the numbers were just used to make the sums work.
Maybe something like a naval history, presumably navies bought meat in bulk? Anyone got any thoughts?
Later It occurs to me I'm looking at this wrong - it's only the big rich dragons that will be eating whole cows, your average dragon in the street probably just buys a goat or a few pounds of beef. So I'll work it out from butcher prices, which I already have.
What I really need is some idea of the cost of a beef carcasse in the mid-Victorian era. I can then relate other prices I know to that. Presumably information like this is available, but I've not got very far - I got a victorian maths text that gave three different prices for a cow in three different sums, but I'm pretty sure that there is no real world connection, the numbers were just used to make the sums work.
Maybe something like a naval history, presumably navies bought meat in bulk? Anyone got any thoughts?
Later It occurs to me I'm looking at this wrong - it's only the big rich dragons that will be eating whole cows, your average dragon in the street probably just buys a goat or a few pounds of beef. So I'll work it out from butcher prices, which I already have.
no subject
Don't forget goats and sheep! And pigs!
no subject
no subject
"Herefords were still bred as prime cattle not fashionable breeds and in 1819 the average price at auction for 28 Prime Herefordshire Cattle of Benjamin Tomkins was £149. The Hereford was pre-eminent among the best breeds of the country."
From here:
http://www.smr.herefordshire.gov.uk/agriculture%20_industry/hereford_cattle.htm
no subject
no subject
Mostly donkey actually.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?_r=1&res=9C0CE4D9133CE633A25753C1A9679D946396D6CF&oref=slogin
This article says a pound of beef is 10 cents a pound.
http://www.kyrene.k12.az.us/schools/brisas/sunda/decade/1900.htm#daily%20life
And finally a list of commodity prices for 1890:
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0034-6535(192610)8%3A4%3C177%3AAMIOCP%3E2.0.CO%3B2-S
However, this one requires that you access their site from a library.
Finally, there is this search string on Google Books that might help:
http://books.google.com/books?source=web&q=meat+prices+1890+england&btnG=Search+Books
My Google-fu is strong...
no subject
no subject
My faith in Google books was never strong, and it wanes more with every one of those "you'll have to borrow this one from a library or buy it frome Abebooks" links.
I'll check if my local library has access to that site, might be a possibility.