This article investigates the debates surrounding immigration to England some three hundred years ago and considers why it was that between the 1680s and the 1710s a discernible change occurred in how migrants were treated. Work on the emergence of a “British” Protestant identity and its relationship with continental Europe, on changing ideas of Englishness and on the campaign for a relaxation in rights of access to the English and colonial labor market are considered. The shift in popular and political responses to the arrival of refugees in England in 1709 provides a contrast to the charitable welcome extended to migrants a generation before and offers an opportunity to see that views of foreign migrants changed for a combination of reaso...
Ethnic associations were once vibrant features of societies, such as the United States and Canada, w...
London was a fast-expanding metropolis in the early modern period, largely fuelled by migration, dom...
Ethnic associations were once vibrant features of societies, such as the United States and Canada, w...
While very prominent in the contemporary world, anxiety about the potentially negative impact that i...
Copyright © 2016 The North American Conference on British Studies. This article reconstructs a cruci...
While very prominent in the contemporary world, anxiety about the potentially negative impact that i...
Immigration and its consequences is one of the most contentious issues in the contemporary world, an...
Working for the Crown: German Migrants and Britain's Commercial Success in the Early Eighteenth-cen...
The growth of public and academic interest in Englishness has raised important questions about post-...
Pre-sixteenth-century England was not unfamiliar with the comings and goings of immigrants, but the ...
This dissertation, based on the largest extant port register for a single year in the colonial perio...
This article offers a comprehensive examination of the relationship between foreign residents and th...
Through close-readings of Mary Tudor's royal entry, the anonymous interlude Wealth and Health, and J...
The English had the opportunity to serve an apprenticeship for technologies they desired in the earl...
This article examines the public attitudes of various religious commentators in Britain towards emig...
Ethnic associations were once vibrant features of societies, such as the United States and Canada, w...
London was a fast-expanding metropolis in the early modern period, largely fuelled by migration, dom...
Ethnic associations were once vibrant features of societies, such as the United States and Canada, w...
While very prominent in the contemporary world, anxiety about the potentially negative impact that i...
Copyright © 2016 The North American Conference on British Studies. This article reconstructs a cruci...
While very prominent in the contemporary world, anxiety about the potentially negative impact that i...
Immigration and its consequences is one of the most contentious issues in the contemporary world, an...
Working for the Crown: German Migrants and Britain's Commercial Success in the Early Eighteenth-cen...
The growth of public and academic interest in Englishness has raised important questions about post-...
Pre-sixteenth-century England was not unfamiliar with the comings and goings of immigrants, but the ...
This dissertation, based on the largest extant port register for a single year in the colonial perio...
This article offers a comprehensive examination of the relationship between foreign residents and th...
Through close-readings of Mary Tudor's royal entry, the anonymous interlude Wealth and Health, and J...
The English had the opportunity to serve an apprenticeship for technologies they desired in the earl...
This article examines the public attitudes of various religious commentators in Britain towards emig...
Ethnic associations were once vibrant features of societies, such as the United States and Canada, w...
London was a fast-expanding metropolis in the early modern period, largely fuelled by migration, dom...
Ethnic associations were once vibrant features of societies, such as the United States and Canada, w...