The Diggers were small groups that appeared after the English Civil War who cultivated common land with carrots, beans and corn. This paper looks at the religiosity of the Diggers and how their ideas about bread, creation and the right use of land underpinned their thinking about every aspect of society
The years 1649-1650 witnessed the emergence of two prominent radical sects of the British Civil Wars...
This essay reconstructs the discourses concerning hunger, protest, punishment and paternalism that c...
Coming from Manchester in 1817, the march of the 'Blanketeers' has generally been taken to be someth...
The Diggers were small groups that appeared after the English Civil War who cultivated common land w...
This is the first full-length, modern study of the Diggers or ?True Levellers?, who were among the m...
In the beginning of 1649 a group of landless people began to build houses and plant crops on the com...
On Sunday, 1 or perhaps 8 April 1649—it is difficult to establish the date with certainty—five peopl...
Since their rediscovery in the nineteenth century—first by Liberal, Socialist, and Marxist historian...
This paper is a survey of newspaper articles published in 1649 concerning an apparently trivial even...
During the English Civil Wars a number of men turned their attention to serious land problems caused...
This is the text of a professorial inaugural lecture given at the University of Sussex in October 20...
The study of rural history and social unrest in the English countryside has concentrated largely on ...
Food security is discussed with a particular focus on the decades either side of 1300, years charact...
The historian E.P Thompson famously described English peasant bread riots in the 18th century as bas...
In late eighteenth century and the early nineteenth century in Britain, the Parliamentary Enclosure ...
The years 1649-1650 witnessed the emergence of two prominent radical sects of the British Civil Wars...
This essay reconstructs the discourses concerning hunger, protest, punishment and paternalism that c...
Coming from Manchester in 1817, the march of the 'Blanketeers' has generally been taken to be someth...
The Diggers were small groups that appeared after the English Civil War who cultivated common land w...
This is the first full-length, modern study of the Diggers or ?True Levellers?, who were among the m...
In the beginning of 1649 a group of landless people began to build houses and plant crops on the com...
On Sunday, 1 or perhaps 8 April 1649—it is difficult to establish the date with certainty—five peopl...
Since their rediscovery in the nineteenth century—first by Liberal, Socialist, and Marxist historian...
This paper is a survey of newspaper articles published in 1649 concerning an apparently trivial even...
During the English Civil Wars a number of men turned their attention to serious land problems caused...
This is the text of a professorial inaugural lecture given at the University of Sussex in October 20...
The study of rural history and social unrest in the English countryside has concentrated largely on ...
Food security is discussed with a particular focus on the decades either side of 1300, years charact...
The historian E.P Thompson famously described English peasant bread riots in the 18th century as bas...
In late eighteenth century and the early nineteenth century in Britain, the Parliamentary Enclosure ...
The years 1649-1650 witnessed the emergence of two prominent radical sects of the British Civil Wars...
This essay reconstructs the discourses concerning hunger, protest, punishment and paternalism that c...
Coming from Manchester in 1817, the march of the 'Blanketeers' has generally been taken to be someth...