This article examines for the first time the accounts for the newspaper the London Gazette from May 1695 to February 1697. These accounts show that the Gazette’s circulation in this period was spectacular. I argue that this does not simply represent the triumph of print; the Gazette was produced and consumed within the wider context of the exchange and evaluation of manuscript and oral news. Moreover, the Gazette does not easily fit the categories employed in some current scholarly debates about seventeenth-century print culture. It was read as much for its foreign political news as for its domestic announcements, it had an afterlife as a journal of record and although profitable in this period it was not simply a commercial enterprise. Fur...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
At the turn of the eighteenth century, newspapers had established themselves as the principal port o...
During the Elizabethan and Jacobean period, public opinion in England was kept informed of the polit...
This thesis explores printed periodical news coverage of the Thirty Years’ War, its readership and i...
Press historians argue that the press boom of 1695 transformed the way in which English men and wome...
International audienceThis chapter charts changes in the business of news in England and its North A...
This paper analyses a little known London newspaper which appeared every week between 1650 and 1661,...
Publishing Business in Eighteenth-Century England assesses the contribution of the business press an...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
The subject of this thesis is news management in London during the Interregnum and early Restoration...
The article presents the emergence of the three major French-language gazettes published in the Dutc...
International audienceA satirical weekly paper called the Grub-Street Journal ( GSJ 1730–1737) offer...
A dominant narrative shaping how we view the eighteenth-century English press is that newspapers wer...
International audienceThe growth of newspapers and other periodicals in England after 1695 raised a ...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
At the turn of the eighteenth century, newspapers had established themselves as the principal port o...
During the Elizabethan and Jacobean period, public opinion in England was kept informed of the polit...
This thesis explores printed periodical news coverage of the Thirty Years’ War, its readership and i...
Press historians argue that the press boom of 1695 transformed the way in which English men and wome...
International audienceThis chapter charts changes in the business of news in England and its North A...
This paper analyses a little known London newspaper which appeared every week between 1650 and 1661,...
Publishing Business in Eighteenth-Century England assesses the contribution of the business press an...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
The subject of this thesis is news management in London during the Interregnum and early Restoration...
The article presents the emergence of the three major French-language gazettes published in the Dutc...
International audienceA satirical weekly paper called the Grub-Street Journal ( GSJ 1730–1737) offer...
A dominant narrative shaping how we view the eighteenth-century English press is that newspapers wer...
International audienceThe growth of newspapers and other periodicals in England after 1695 raised a ...
This paper explores the contested afterlife of Philosophical Transactions following the death of its...
Long considered the literary representatives of the public sphere, British periodicals underwent sig...
At the turn of the eighteenth century, newspapers had established themselves as the principal port o...
During the Elizabethan and Jacobean period, public opinion in England was kept informed of the polit...