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What were the causes and effects of the English enclosure movement?

The development of capitalism in industry and agriculture led to a change in the social structure of Britain, a change best characterized by the decline of the old aristocracy and the rise of the new. The enclosure movement also caused a division of the peasant class, and while a few became rich, a large number of small peasants lost their land, especially to the dispossession of the enclosure movement, and were reduced to the status of industrial or agricultural hired laborers. Forced to sell their labor at the lowest possible price to artisanal workshop owners and large farmers and become wage laborers. In this way, a new class structure and consequently new class conflicts emerged in 16th century English society. The enclosure movement led to two different outcomes for the farmers, one was the degradation and demise of the small farmers, while the other was the rise of the homesteaders, who followed the trend of the development of the enclosure movement, in which they expanded their business practices again to gain more advantages, and at the same time improved their rights and status, and they also carried out the method of employing laborers to farm the land, which also coincided with the development of modern agriculture