6hum0399: politics of parliamentary reform: lecture 9

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6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9 Loyalism

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6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9. Loyalism. Structure of the lecture. - return to the debate about Pitt’s ‘reign of terror’ in the 1790s - vulgar conservatism - ‘Liberal Conservatism’ and the 1820s - ‘Ultra’ Toryism. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

Loyalism

Page 2: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

Structure of the lecture

• - return to the debate about Pitt’s ‘reign of terror’ in the 1790s

• - vulgar conservatism• - ‘Liberal Conservatism’ and the 1820s• - ‘Ultra’ Toryism

Page 3: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

Object of the week: Cheap repository tract, ‘The Riot, or Half a Loaf is better than no Bread’ and other songs

(1795)

Hannah More (1745-1833)

Page 4: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

James Gillray, ‘Un petit Souper a la Parisienne’ (1793)

Page 5: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

James Gillray, ‘French Liberty, British Slavery’ (1792)

Page 6: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

John Reeves (1752-1829)Association for Preserving Liberty and

Property against Republicans and Levellers.

Page 7: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

Kentish Gazette, 28 Dec. 1792, in F. O’Gorman, ‘The Paine Burnings of 1792-3’, Past and Present, 193 (2006), 124.

• On Monday the 17th inst. [of December] the effigy of Tom Paine was burnt in Dover, amidst a greater number of people than ever was remembered to assemble there at any one time. He was drawn through the town in a cart; in his hands were The Rights of Man and a pair of old stays.

• Preceding the procession were transparencies in abundance, adapted to the occasion; the clergymen who attended repeatedly directed him to reflect on the misery he was likely to bring on the inhabitants of this happy isle, had not Providence, which generally checks the projects of malicious minds, interfered; and about seven o’clock in the evening, he arrived at the place of execution, amidst the hisses of persons innumerable, when the sentence which had been passed on him was at the request of the populace read by the executioner . . .

Page 8: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

Robert Jenkinson, Lord Liverpool (1770-

1828) by Sir Thomas

Lawrence, c. 1828

Page 9: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

Gillray, ‘The Republican Attack’, 1795

Leeds Mercury, 1 Feb 1817

Page 10: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

Charles Grant, ‘Four Weighty Authorities on Reform’ (1831)

Page 11: 6HUM0399: Politics of Parliamentary Reform: Lecture 9

‘The champions of reform destroying the monster of corruption’ (12 March 1831)