The gentry were aristocratic landowners who were not peers. According to historian
G. E. Mingay, the gentry were landowners whose wealth "made possible a certain kind of education, a standard of comfort, and a degree of leisure and a common interest in ways of spending it". Leisure distinguished gentry from businessmen who gained their wealth through work. The gentry did not enterprise or marketeer but were known most for working in management of estates; their income came largely from rents paid by
tenant farmers living these estates. By the 17th century, the gentry was divided into four ranks: •
Baronet: a hereditary title created by
James I in 1611, giving the holder the right to be addressed as
Sir. •
Knight: originally a mounted warrior who fought for the king and his barons during the
Middle Ages. Knighthood eventually lost its martial connotations and was awarded to civilians in honour of service to
the Crown. Like baronets, knights are addressed as
Sir; however, the rank of knight is not hereditary. •
Esquire: originally a knight's attendant or
squire. In the 14th century, this rank could be conferred by the Crown. Certain officeholders, such as
justices of the peace, were considered to be esquires. It was also applied to the sons of peers and the firstborn sons of baronets and knights. •
Gentleman: the lowest rank within the gentry. Gentlemen ranked above
yeomen or landowning farmers. The Statute of Additions of 1413 recognised gentlemen as a distinct social rank, but the line between the lower gentry and the yeomanry remained blurred. In a
historiographical survey,
Peter Coss describes a number of approaches to deciding who was gentry. One is to view the gentry as those recognised legally as possessing gentility. However, Coss finds this method unsatisfactory because it "seems certain that gentility was widely felt and articulated within society long before legislation was in place to tell us so". Other historians define gentry by land ownership and income level, but there is still the problem of whether this should include professionals and town dwellers.
Rosemary Horrox argues that an urban gentry existed in the 15th century. For some historians of early modern England, the gentry included families with
coats of arms, but Coss notes that not all gentry were
armigerous. Coss proposes that the gentry had three main characteristics: (1) landownership, (2) a nobility or gentility (shared with the peerage) that distinguished them from the rest of the population, and (3) a territorial-based collective identity and power over the larger population. ==Occupations==