The unrest in London during the ‘Exclusion Crisis’ filled Charles II with fear and foreboding of a new civil war. Yet although recent research has highlighted the important role played by the capital's inhabitants in the period, the evidence available for studying the groups of radicals involved has been sketchy and fragmentary. This article uses a new source, in the form of a mass petition, signed by almost 16,000 citizens, which was presented to the king in January 1680. It offers a unique opportunity to measure public opinion during one of the most turbulent periods of the Restoration, and to test assumptions about the character of the opposition to the king. After a discussion of the aims and conduct of the campaign, a prosopographical ...
The Gordon Riots of 1778 were one of the most violent public demonstrations of the century in London...
Building on recent scholarship relating to the emergence of printed petitions in Britain in the seve...
This thesis examines the origins, aftermath and legacy of the Birmingham Priestley Riots of 1791. Si...
Petitioning was a staple of the Early Modern European world, theoretically available to all, from pe...
General rejoicing greeted the Restoration of Charles II to the English throne in 1660; however the t...
Throughout the early 1640s, as the rest of the nation prepared itself for an inevitable clash betwee...
At the beginning of his reign the City of London was well-disposed toward King Charles I. Yet, in ea...
The national petitioning campaign for parliamentary reform in 1816-17 was the biggest popular petiti...
This article explores popular politics and royalism during the English Civil Wars through the reacti...
This thesis originated in an attempt to explain the Restoration of Charles II. If the Puritan Revolu...
This dissertation explores the dynamics of mobilization in London during the first three years of th...
AbstractThis article examines the nature of petitioning to the Westminster Parliament from the begin...
Coming from Manchester in 1817, the march of the 'Blanketeers' has generally been taken to be someth...
15, [1] p.A country-man, a well-willer of the city and a lover of truth and peace = Sir Francis Neth...
The subject of this study is the total transference of power from Whigs to Tories, achieved in the l...
The Gordon Riots of 1778 were one of the most violent public demonstrations of the century in London...
Building on recent scholarship relating to the emergence of printed petitions in Britain in the seve...
This thesis examines the origins, aftermath and legacy of the Birmingham Priestley Riots of 1791. Si...
Petitioning was a staple of the Early Modern European world, theoretically available to all, from pe...
General rejoicing greeted the Restoration of Charles II to the English throne in 1660; however the t...
Throughout the early 1640s, as the rest of the nation prepared itself for an inevitable clash betwee...
At the beginning of his reign the City of London was well-disposed toward King Charles I. Yet, in ea...
The national petitioning campaign for parliamentary reform in 1816-17 was the biggest popular petiti...
This article explores popular politics and royalism during the English Civil Wars through the reacti...
This thesis originated in an attempt to explain the Restoration of Charles II. If the Puritan Revolu...
This dissertation explores the dynamics of mobilization in London during the first three years of th...
AbstractThis article examines the nature of petitioning to the Westminster Parliament from the begin...
Coming from Manchester in 1817, the march of the 'Blanketeers' has generally been taken to be someth...
15, [1] p.A country-man, a well-willer of the city and a lover of truth and peace = Sir Francis Neth...
The subject of this study is the total transference of power from Whigs to Tories, achieved in the l...
The Gordon Riots of 1778 were one of the most violent public demonstrations of the century in London...
Building on recent scholarship relating to the emergence of printed petitions in Britain in the seve...
This thesis examines the origins, aftermath and legacy of the Birmingham Priestley Riots of 1791. Si...