AbstractThis essay reconsiders the character and significance of Edmund Burke's attitude to the seventeenth-century civil wars and interregnum. Burke may have venerated the “revolution principles” of 1688–89 over those of the 1640s, not least in the Reflections on the Revolution in France in which he notoriously compares English dissenting radicals to regicidal Puritans. Yet his response to the first Stuart revolution is more complex than has commonly been allowed and is closely bound up with Burke's earlier parliamentary career as a prominent member of the Rockingham Whig connection. The revival of an anti-Stuart idiom within the extra-parliamentary opposition of the 1760s, together with the mounting conflict with the North American coloni...
In this paper, I examine three critical aspects of Burke\u27s beliefs, principles, and political jud...
Edmund Burke is often considered an arch-critic of enthusiasm in its various religious and secular f...
This essay is devoted to a relatively minor episode in Edmund Burke’s parliamentary career and polit...
In the late eighteenth century, the British people refashioned their relationship with empire in the...
Edmund Burke in recent years has assumed extraordinary stature in American political thinking as the...
This dissertation examines the late Eighteenth Century debate in England and France over the foundat...
The present thesis offers a historical interpretation of Edmund Burke‟s classic text, Reflections on...
Few would deny Charles I’s uniqueness in British history. The voluminous interpretations of Charles ...
This essay discusses the relationship between Edmund Burke and the rational Dissenters who were an i...
On November 16,1775,Edmund Burke introduced his last plan for conciliation. This plan marked a funda...
The present thesis offers a historical interpretation of Edmund Burke‟s classic text, Reflections on...
In this second of two volumes, Carl B. Cone demonstrates once again that only through a study of Edm...
Edmund Burke published A Short Account of a Late Short Administration (1776), the first of his many ...
Edmund Burke supported the American colonists before the Revolution, notwithstanding the "conservati...
On July 10,1765,shortly after the fall of the Grenville Ministry, George III reluctantly made Lord R...
In this paper, I examine three critical aspects of Burke\u27s beliefs, principles, and political jud...
Edmund Burke is often considered an arch-critic of enthusiasm in its various religious and secular f...
This essay is devoted to a relatively minor episode in Edmund Burke’s parliamentary career and polit...
In the late eighteenth century, the British people refashioned their relationship with empire in the...
Edmund Burke in recent years has assumed extraordinary stature in American political thinking as the...
This dissertation examines the late Eighteenth Century debate in England and France over the foundat...
The present thesis offers a historical interpretation of Edmund Burke‟s classic text, Reflections on...
Few would deny Charles I’s uniqueness in British history. The voluminous interpretations of Charles ...
This essay discusses the relationship between Edmund Burke and the rational Dissenters who were an i...
On November 16,1775,Edmund Burke introduced his last plan for conciliation. This plan marked a funda...
The present thesis offers a historical interpretation of Edmund Burke‟s classic text, Reflections on...
In this second of two volumes, Carl B. Cone demonstrates once again that only through a study of Edm...
Edmund Burke published A Short Account of a Late Short Administration (1776), the first of his many ...
Edmund Burke supported the American colonists before the Revolution, notwithstanding the "conservati...
On July 10,1765,shortly after the fall of the Grenville Ministry, George III reluctantly made Lord R...
In this paper, I examine three critical aspects of Burke\u27s beliefs, principles, and political jud...
Edmund Burke is often considered an arch-critic of enthusiasm in its various religious and secular f...
This essay is devoted to a relatively minor episode in Edmund Burke’s parliamentary career and polit...