This article explores popular politics and royalism during the English Civil Wars through the reaction of magistrates to the riot in Norwich on 24 April 1648 that was referred to by contemporaries as the ‘mutiny’ or the ‘Great Blow’. On the eve of the Second Civil War, this confrontation between urban rioters and New Model Army troopers led to the largest explosion of gunpowder in seventeenth-century England, when ninety-eight barrels were ignited at the Committee House. The article analyses the 281 witness statements that were produced as part of the judicial inquest, making this the best-documented provincial riot of the early modern period. These previously neglected proceedings can do much to advance our understanding of popular politic...
The spread of the plague in Norwich in July 1603 disrupted the city’s celebrations of the coronation...
This thesis examines the origins, aftermath and legacy of the Birmingham Priestley Riots of 1791. Si...
The requirement to proclaim Richard Cromwell lord protector in September 1658 forced town leaders to...
This essay reconstructs the discourses concerning hunger, protest, punishment and paternalism that c...
This article explores the public ceremonies chosen to mark the restoration of Charles II in a range ...
Throughout the early 1640s, as the rest of the nation prepared itself for an inevitable clash betwee...
The unrest in London during the ‘Exclusion Crisis’ filled Charles II with fear and foreboding of a n...
This article considers how the image of the enemy was deployed by parliamentarian activists in civil...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.For popular revolt in late-me...
The events of the early summer of 1381 confronted the English government with a social and political...
Within the body of scholarly interpretation of the British Civil Wars (1642-1651), there is an abse...
This article explores the polemical presentation of Oxford, the royalist capital between 1642 and 16...
This thesis discusses popular participation in politics in early modern England and focqses on four ...
The execution of Charles I and the establishment of a republican and , subsequently, a military gove...
The spread of the plague in Norwich in July 1603 disrupted the city’s celebrations of the coronation...
The spread of the plague in Norwich in July 1603 disrupted the city’s celebrations of the coronation...
This thesis examines the origins, aftermath and legacy of the Birmingham Priestley Riots of 1791. Si...
The requirement to proclaim Richard Cromwell lord protector in September 1658 forced town leaders to...
This essay reconstructs the discourses concerning hunger, protest, punishment and paternalism that c...
This article explores the public ceremonies chosen to mark the restoration of Charles II in a range ...
Throughout the early 1640s, as the rest of the nation prepared itself for an inevitable clash betwee...
The unrest in London during the ‘Exclusion Crisis’ filled Charles II with fear and foreboding of a n...
This article considers how the image of the enemy was deployed by parliamentarian activists in civil...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.For popular revolt in late-me...
The events of the early summer of 1381 confronted the English government with a social and political...
Within the body of scholarly interpretation of the British Civil Wars (1642-1651), there is an abse...
This article explores the polemical presentation of Oxford, the royalist capital between 1642 and 16...
This thesis discusses popular participation in politics in early modern England and focqses on four ...
The execution of Charles I and the establishment of a republican and , subsequently, a military gove...
The spread of the plague in Norwich in July 1603 disrupted the city’s celebrations of the coronation...
The spread of the plague in Norwich in July 1603 disrupted the city’s celebrations of the coronation...
This thesis examines the origins, aftermath and legacy of the Birmingham Priestley Riots of 1791. Si...
The requirement to proclaim Richard Cromwell lord protector in September 1658 forced town leaders to...