The subject of this thesis is news management in London during the Interregnum and early Restoration, 1649-1661. The focus will be on an area of media History previously neglected by scholars. There is a historical consensus that within London there was considerable opposition towards the governments of the Interregnum. However, the role of state sponsored news management as a mid-seventeenth Century innovation has been overlooked. The threat of royalist press, in particular The Man in The Moon, was that it directly challenged the official news spin in the Capital and aimed to mobilise discontent towards the authorities. Recognising the effect of critical print in mobilising discontent there, the regime made it a priority not only to sta...
At the beginning of his reign the City of London was well-disposed toward King Charles I. Yet, in ea...
Though an occasional feature of society and politics prior to the late-seventeenth century, it is o...
The principal argument of this thesis is that royalist literary publishing in the civil wars and Int...
This thesis explores printed periodical news coverage of the Thirty Years’ War, its readership and i...
Press historians argue that the press boom of 1695 transformed the way in which English men and wome...
This article examines late seventeenth-century news management through the lens of the Haarlem journ...
This paper analyses a little known London newspaper which appeared every week between 1650 and 1661,...
This thesis traces the birth and spread of the newspaper in the Holy Roman Empire in the first half ...
This is a sustained critique of the historiography of oral, scribal and printed news processes in th...
This article seeks to begin to recover the multiplicity of media participation by focusing on its re...
This article reconsiders ideas of the public sphere in the seventeenth century, by focusing on how p...
This thesis assesses the role of illicit printing in early modern England, from the publication of t...
This article explores the polemical presentation of Oxford, the royalist capital between 1642 and 16...
The period from 1650 to 1750 was not characterised by major institutional innovation in the governme...
The outbreak and continued progress of the Irish rebellion of 1641 played a significant role in the ...
At the beginning of his reign the City of London was well-disposed toward King Charles I. Yet, in ea...
Though an occasional feature of society and politics prior to the late-seventeenth century, it is o...
The principal argument of this thesis is that royalist literary publishing in the civil wars and Int...
This thesis explores printed periodical news coverage of the Thirty Years’ War, its readership and i...
Press historians argue that the press boom of 1695 transformed the way in which English men and wome...
This article examines late seventeenth-century news management through the lens of the Haarlem journ...
This paper analyses a little known London newspaper which appeared every week between 1650 and 1661,...
This thesis traces the birth and spread of the newspaper in the Holy Roman Empire in the first half ...
This is a sustained critique of the historiography of oral, scribal and printed news processes in th...
This article seeks to begin to recover the multiplicity of media participation by focusing on its re...
This article reconsiders ideas of the public sphere in the seventeenth century, by focusing on how p...
This thesis assesses the role of illicit printing in early modern England, from the publication of t...
This article explores the polemical presentation of Oxford, the royalist capital between 1642 and 16...
The period from 1650 to 1750 was not characterised by major institutional innovation in the governme...
The outbreak and continued progress of the Irish rebellion of 1641 played a significant role in the ...
At the beginning of his reign the City of London was well-disposed toward King Charles I. Yet, in ea...
Though an occasional feature of society and politics prior to the late-seventeenth century, it is o...
The principal argument of this thesis is that royalist literary publishing in the civil wars and Int...