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An Agenda for Historical Studies of Rural Protest in Britain, 1750–1850

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Andrew Charlesworth
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK

Abstract

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Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1991

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References

Notes

1 Reed, M. and Wells, R. (eds.), Class, Conflict and Protest in the English Countryside 1700–1880 (London, 1990)Google Scholar; Jones, D.J.V., Rebecca's Children: A Study of Rural Society, Crime, and Protest (Oxford, 1989)Google Scholar; Mingay, G.E. (ed.), The Unquiet Countryside (London, 1989).Google Scholar

2 Two notable exceptions to this are Rule, J.G., ‘The Labouring Miner in Cornwall, c. 1740–1820’ (University of Warwick Ph.D thesis, 1971) pp. 116–80Google Scholar, but more especially, for his discussion of the 1756–7 wage campaign and protests and the 1766 food riots in Gloucestershire, see Randall, A.J., ‘Labour and the Industrial Revolution in the West of England Woollen Industry’ (University of Birmingham Ph.D. thesis, 1979) chapter 3.Google Scholar

3 See also Wells, R., ‘Rural rebels in Southern England in the 1830s’ in Emsley, C. and Walvin, J. (eds.), Artisans, Peasants and Proletarians 1760–1860 (London, 1985), pp. 124–65Google Scholar and Wells, R., ‘Tolpuddle in the context of English agrarian labour history 1780–1850’, in Rule, J.G. (ed.), British Trade Unionism: The Formative Years 1750–1850 (London, 1988), pp.98142.Google Scholar

4 Jones, , Rebecca's Children, pp. 34–5.Google Scholar

5 ibid., p. 340.

7 ibid., p. 339.

8 See Snell, K.D.M., Annals of the Labouring Poor: Social Change and Agrarian England 1660–1900 (Cambridge, 1985) especially chapters 5 and 7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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11 Connolly, S.J. ‘The Houghers: Agrarian protest in early eighteenth-century Connacht’, in Philpin, C.H.E. (ed.), Nationalism and Popular Protest in Ireland (Cambridge, 1987), p 153.Google Scholar Connolly makes the point about the parallels with food riots, Connolly, ‘The Houghers’, p. 159.Google Scholar

12 See, for example, Clark, S. and Donnelly, J.S. Jr., ‘The tradition of violence: Introduction’, in Clark, S. and Donnelly, J.S. Jr. (eds.), Irish Peasants: Violence and Political Unrest 1780–1914 (Manchester, 1983) p. 27Google Scholar and Forster, R.F., ‘Introduction’ in Philpin (ed.), Nationalism, p. 6.Google Scholar

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44 Randall, A.J., ‘The shearmen and the Wiltshire outrages of 1802: Trade unionism and industrial violence’, Social History 7 (1982) 283304CrossRefGoogle Scholar and for Luddism see Thompson, E.P., The Making of the English Working Class (London 1968)Google Scholar, chapter 14 and Dinwiddy, J., ‘Luddism and politics in the northern counties’, Social History 4 (1979) 3363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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