Integrating in detail the experiences of both Britain and Ireland, 1820
provides a compelling narrative and analysis of the United Kingdom in a year
of European revolution. It charts the events and forces that tested the
government almost to its limits, and the processes and mechanisms through
which order was maintained. -- .
No British social movement captured contemporary imaginations as Chartism did.
This unique book is the only history to offer complete, in-depth coverage of
the full chronological spread of its activities (1838-58), based throughout on
detailed research. -- .
This book explores some of the main channels and bye-ways in the history of
Chartism; it considers: The place of Chartism within the wider framework of
Victorian politics The Chartist Land Plan The impact of Canada's 1837-8
rebellions on Chartism Chartism's endurance in Wales beyond the 1839 Rising
The role of children in Chartist
First published in 1994, this volume features an autobiography of Allen Davenport, a key figure linking Chartism with the French Revolution, along with some of his selected works. Davenport was an important propagandist for agrarian reform, a critical follower of Robert Owen, one of the first male supporters of the feminist causes and birth control and a leading member of the revolutionary underground movement in Regency London. He was a prolific author, political journalist and poet. His autobiography, published in 1845, has long been presumed lost - historians have had to make do with tantalising fragments from contemporary reviews. When a copy was found in Nashville in 1982 it was immediately recognised as a unique source of information about nineteenth-century popular politics. This volume reprints the complete text with editorial apparatus and supplemented by a careful selection of Davenport's other writing by Dr Malcolm Chase. The Life and Literary Pursuits of Allen Davenport thus gives a unique insight into the cultural and political life of England in the crowded years between Peterloo and Chartism.