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Migration's effect on Britain - economics and commerceHuguenots come to settle, 16th and 17th Century

Migration shaped England and later Britain. Danes, Huguenots, Irish and Eastern Europeans migrated to and settled in Britain in the hope of trade and work.

Part of HistoryBritain: migration, empires and the people c790 to the present day

Huguenots come to settle, 16th and 17th Century

Looking West

did not have a major impact on England鈥檚 economy during the 16th and 17th centuries. This was because there were generally small numbers of people involved in any of the migrations in and out of the country. The exception was the migration of the late 17th century.

Huguenots in France had generally lived in towns and had followed skilled crafts, such as textile weaving and watchmaking, and professions like law and banking. Between 40,000 and 50,000 Huguenots settled in England, mainly in major towns like London, and they continued their crafts and professions. They easily into English society, because their religion and culture were so like their host society. They learned the language and worshipped in the manner, which was dominant in England after the of 1688.

There were a number of very prosperous Huguenot families in England, and well-known descendants of those families include:

  • David Garrick; a famous London-based actor of the mid-18th century who brought back a lot of Shakespeare鈥檚 works to London audiences as well as a more realistic style of acting. He was the grandson of a Huguenot wine merchant from Bordeaux.
  • John Dollond; a maker of optical instruments who founded an optical business in 1750, which later became the firm of Dollond and Aitchison.