Between 1792 and 1814 London was home to a flourishing French émigré newspaper and periodical press that served both an exile audience and a Europe-wide French-speaking elite. The experienced journalists who had fled the revolution and staffed the press are revealed as professional activists engaged in an international ideological struggle; their successful counter-revolutionary propaganda affected French foreign policy, while their relationship with their British government patrons remained remarkably independent. The evolving counter-revolutionary ideology of the émigré press was highly influential in driving events in Europe, both clandestinely and more openly; only with the accession of Bonaparte in 1799, and the return of many of the e...
Between 1789 and 1815, thousands of French counter-revolutionaries chose exile rather than abide by ...
In the wake of France's defeat in the Seven Years War (1756-1763) Louis XV's ministers experimented ...
In this volume an international team of contributors address several key themes surrounding the role...
This chapter offers a long-term assessment of French exile journalism in the second half of the nine...
This chapter propounds a functional model for studying the role and effectiveness of the primary mea...
When the French Revolution began in 1789, it was, for the most part, welcomed by the people of Brita...
In April 1816 the British foreign minister Castlereagh justified continued government funding of Fre...
The French blackmailer-libellistes operating out of London between 1758 and 1792 were involved in on...
This article examines a series of English-language newspaper ventures produced in revolutionary Fran...
Bertaud Jean-Paul. The French Emigrés in Europe and the struggle against Revolution, 1789-1814, edit...
British radicals established a pro-revolutionary society in Paris in the late months of 1792, at a t...
The above statement was made in London by the soon to be restored King of France in April 1814 at a ...
Fabrice Bensimon, The Echo of the French Revolution in 19th-century Britain (1815-1870) After the e...
This article analyses a set of French periodical articles on British travel writing, exploring the c...
This book is a study of political exile and transnational activism in the late-Victorian period. It ...
Between 1789 and 1815, thousands of French counter-revolutionaries chose exile rather than abide by ...
In the wake of France's defeat in the Seven Years War (1756-1763) Louis XV's ministers experimented ...
In this volume an international team of contributors address several key themes surrounding the role...
This chapter offers a long-term assessment of French exile journalism in the second half of the nine...
This chapter propounds a functional model for studying the role and effectiveness of the primary mea...
When the French Revolution began in 1789, it was, for the most part, welcomed by the people of Brita...
In April 1816 the British foreign minister Castlereagh justified continued government funding of Fre...
The French blackmailer-libellistes operating out of London between 1758 and 1792 were involved in on...
This article examines a series of English-language newspaper ventures produced in revolutionary Fran...
Bertaud Jean-Paul. The French Emigrés in Europe and the struggle against Revolution, 1789-1814, edit...
British radicals established a pro-revolutionary society in Paris in the late months of 1792, at a t...
The above statement was made in London by the soon to be restored King of France in April 1814 at a ...
Fabrice Bensimon, The Echo of the French Revolution in 19th-century Britain (1815-1870) After the e...
This article analyses a set of French periodical articles on British travel writing, exploring the c...
This book is a study of political exile and transnational activism in the late-Victorian period. It ...
Between 1789 and 1815, thousands of French counter-revolutionaries chose exile rather than abide by ...
In the wake of France's defeat in the Seven Years War (1756-1763) Louis XV's ministers experimented ...
In this volume an international team of contributors address several key themes surrounding the role...