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The House of Lords in the Age of George III (1760-1811)

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The House of Lords in the Age of George III (1760-1811)

A full and comprehensive assessment of the place of the 18th-century peerage and House of Lords.

A full and comprehensive assessment of the place of the 18th-century peerage and House of Lords.

  • Uses statistical and anecdotal evidence to create a variegated portrait of the nobility, its political outlook, and the ways in which the nobility's multifarious roles combined to shape its members' conduct as peers of parliament
  • Challenges the assumption that the Lords remained a creature of the crown and demonstrates that peers and bishops were useful, informed, and broadly connected legislators
  • Incorporates the results of recent research on the role of ideology in 18th-century British politics and the legislative business of parliaments
  • Draws on contemporary newspapers and journals and over 120 manuscript collections, some not previously consulted by students of the House
  • Offers new insights into the Lords' changing relations with the crown and the Commons, traces the metamorphosis of the 'party of the crown' into an ultra-tory connection, and demonstrates that even as it resisted some political and social reform, the Lords was a useful legislative chamber that adapted effectively to the rising volume of business


$61.27
The House of Lords in the Age of George III (1760-1811)—
$61.27

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A full and comprehensive assessment of the place of the 18th-century peerage and House of Lords.

A full and comprehensive assessment of the place of the 18th-century peerage and House of Lords.

  • Uses statistical and anecdotal evidence to create a variegated portrait of the nobility, its political outlook, and the ways in which the nobility's multifarious roles combined to shape its members' conduct as peers of parliament
  • Challenges the assumption that the Lords remained a creature of the crown and demonstrates that peers and bishops were useful, informed, and broadly connected legislators
  • Incorporates the results of recent research on the role of ideology in 18th-century British politics and the legislative business of parliaments
  • Draws on contemporary newspapers and journals and over 120 manuscript collections, some not previously consulted by students of the House
  • Offers new insights into the Lords' changing relations with the crown and the Commons, traces the metamorphosis of the 'party of the crown' into an ultra-tory connection, and demonstrates that even as it resisted some political and social reform, the Lords was a useful legislative chamber that adapted effectively to the rising volume of business


The House of Lords in the Age of George III (1760-1811) | Rarewaves