This article examines the practice of ‘requisitioning’ public meetings in Great Britain and Ireland. These written requests to office-holders emerged in Ireland and then Great Britain, following bitter contests over the authenticity and authority of addresses and meetings claiming to represent a county or town in the decade after 1769. If the Seditious Meetings Acts privileged meetings officially convened by local elites, they also codified the practice of householders signing their own advertisements to requisition meetings under magisterial oversight. This would, especially when revolutionary threats receded and local justices’ sympathies permitted, allow local organisers some legal and constitutional claims to public assembly, even if Pe...
Coming from Manchester in 1817, the march of the 'Blanketeers' has generally been taken to be someth...
By their nature, courthouses were built in Ireland as throughout Europe by ‘the state’. They demarca...
This chapter examines the decision-making process between the Home Office and the government’s law o...
AbstractThis article examines the nature of petitioning to the Westminster Parliament from the begin...
This article re-examines one aspect of the celebrated parliamentary reform programme of 1641-2 which...
The paper explores the activities of the Dublin Society as a form of public reason. Founded in 1731 ...
In the process of state formation, representative institutions often serve as a primary arena in whi...
This article explores the public ceremonies chosen to mark the restoration of Charles II in a range ...
In the first post-Glorious Revolution Parliament in Ireland in 1692, a constitutional crisis erupted...
This thesis examines the Treason Felony Act 1848 and the issues it raised when it comes to regulatin...
It is the aim, in this article, to identify the reasons why certain designs for courthouses in early...
In the period 1692-1714, the Irish constitution was redefined through a process of political conflic...
This article is concerned with the structure of repressive governance, and how it has evolved histor...
The national petitioning campaign for parliamentary reform in 1816-17 was the biggest popular petiti...
This thesis presents a comparative study of the communitarian language and ideas which underpinned p...
Coming from Manchester in 1817, the march of the 'Blanketeers' has generally been taken to be someth...
By their nature, courthouses were built in Ireland as throughout Europe by ‘the state’. They demarca...
This chapter examines the decision-making process between the Home Office and the government’s law o...
AbstractThis article examines the nature of petitioning to the Westminster Parliament from the begin...
This article re-examines one aspect of the celebrated parliamentary reform programme of 1641-2 which...
The paper explores the activities of the Dublin Society as a form of public reason. Founded in 1731 ...
In the process of state formation, representative institutions often serve as a primary arena in whi...
This article explores the public ceremonies chosen to mark the restoration of Charles II in a range ...
In the first post-Glorious Revolution Parliament in Ireland in 1692, a constitutional crisis erupted...
This thesis examines the Treason Felony Act 1848 and the issues it raised when it comes to regulatin...
It is the aim, in this article, to identify the reasons why certain designs for courthouses in early...
In the period 1692-1714, the Irish constitution was redefined through a process of political conflic...
This article is concerned with the structure of repressive governance, and how it has evolved histor...
The national petitioning campaign for parliamentary reform in 1816-17 was the biggest popular petiti...
This thesis presents a comparative study of the communitarian language and ideas which underpinned p...
Coming from Manchester in 1817, the march of the 'Blanketeers' has generally been taken to be someth...
By their nature, courthouses were built in Ireland as throughout Europe by ‘the state’. They demarca...
This chapter examines the decision-making process between the Home Office and the government’s law o...