In writing the preface to his novel Caleb Williams in 1794, William Godwin observed that "Terror was the order of the day." Political radicals of the late eighteenth century, in fact, believed they were experiencing what was later called the "English Reign of Terror," as the British government, supported by loyalist associations and militant Church and King mobs, mounted an official counter offensive against the burgeoning reform movement. In the years between 1792 and 1800, no fewer than thirteen repressive measures were enacted to suppress radical enthusiasms, which, for E.P. Thompson, exposed a government taking "halting steps" away from legitimate control and venturing toward a regime that would "dispense with the rule of law...
In the later eighteenth century, the twelve justices of the supreme English common law courts ruled ...
Seventeenth century England saw major theoretical and legal innovations in how political community, ...
Between the early 16th and 18th centuries, English attitude towards crime and correction were based ...
In writing the preface to his novel Caleb Williams in 1794, William Godwin observed that "Terror wa...
Examples of the way in which an organized society reacts to a threat against its continuance are rec...
This chapter examines the decision-making process between the Home Office and the government’s law o...
In 1760, Laurence Shirley, the Fourth Earl Ferrers, killed his steward in cold blood. He was found g...
This thesis explores the jury trial in English radical thinking, politics and political culture duri...
The movement for the abolition of capital punishment is righty associated with the writers of the En...
The period of British history that literary scholars have long associated with the second generatio...
This article is concerned with the structure of repressive governance, and how it has evolved histor...
The opportunity to gain access to representation through peaceful protest ended with Peterloo. In th...
That newspapers were, unlike many books, relatively free from external censorship may be attributed ...
The offense of “sedition” — often characterized as criminalizing the incitement of rebellion against...
The psychology and. punishment of murderers has always been a subject of interest for Dickens. Many ...
In the later eighteenth century, the twelve justices of the supreme English common law courts ruled ...
Seventeenth century England saw major theoretical and legal innovations in how political community, ...
Between the early 16th and 18th centuries, English attitude towards crime and correction were based ...
In writing the preface to his novel Caleb Williams in 1794, William Godwin observed that "Terror wa...
Examples of the way in which an organized society reacts to a threat against its continuance are rec...
This chapter examines the decision-making process between the Home Office and the government’s law o...
In 1760, Laurence Shirley, the Fourth Earl Ferrers, killed his steward in cold blood. He was found g...
This thesis explores the jury trial in English radical thinking, politics and political culture duri...
The movement for the abolition of capital punishment is righty associated with the writers of the En...
The period of British history that literary scholars have long associated with the second generatio...
This article is concerned with the structure of repressive governance, and how it has evolved histor...
The opportunity to gain access to representation through peaceful protest ended with Peterloo. In th...
That newspapers were, unlike many books, relatively free from external censorship may be attributed ...
The offense of “sedition” — often characterized as criminalizing the incitement of rebellion against...
The psychology and. punishment of murderers has always been a subject of interest for Dickens. Many ...
In the later eighteenth century, the twelve justices of the supreme English common law courts ruled ...
Seventeenth century England saw major theoretical and legal innovations in how political community, ...
Between the early 16th and 18th centuries, English attitude towards crime and correction were based ...