18th Century Britain
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Recent papers in 18th Century Britain
Eighteenth-century Britain saw the emergence of a new poetic genre, the “work” poem which took various forms of labor as its subject and was often written by laborers themselves. Several of these working class poets found their lives... more
Words used to describe the Battle of Culloden have always been written with lurid viscerality, from contemporary reports of the dramatic carnage on the moor to scholarly assessments of its enduring effects, still felt both in Scotland and... more
This article argues for a revisionist history of women through the lens of anthropological gift theory by analysing how Princess Ekaterina Romanovna Dashkova used gifts to sustain her relationships, including a tumultuous friendship with... more
This essay reappraises the origins of French Quakerism based on new archival research conducted on both sides of the Channel. It identifies 34 Quaker missionaries in 17th- and early 18C France, sheds new light on the French reception of... more
Britain and the Mahogany Trade of the Americas in the 18th and 19th Centuries I have often wondered many things about wood. I have looked at pieces of furniture and wondered how tall the tree was that it came from. I have wondered where... more
Did women engage in the making of architecture before the nineteenth century? Although most professions requiring specialized knowledge were deemed socially unsuitable for women, women did play active roles in the built environment in... more
Between 1753 and 1836, the institution of marriage in Britain saw transformative change through the introduction of legislation by the State.This dissertation is a reevaluation of the the nature of marriage legislation between 1753 and... more
In a period when social commentators grew increasingly interested in the cottage as an antidote to pauperism, what uses, meanings and rituals did plebeian occupants locate in their dwellings and gardens?
This work analyses the public perception of the role of privateers and their transition to pirates and examines both negative and positive outcomes in various areas like diplomacy, international trade, legal, racial and gender issues. The... more
This paper is an attempt to disclose the use of literary factors in Swift's "A Modest Proposal" (1729).
1830 İhtilalleri, 1815 yılında Viyana Kongresi’nde imzalanan Barış Sözleşmesi’ne karşı halkın, monarşilerin baskılarına daha fazla dayanamaması yüzünden liberalizm düşüncesinin benimsenmesiyle başlayan ayaklanmalardır.
An edition of Goldsmith's description of the effects of the Industrial Revolution on the lives of rural England, formerly based on cottage industry. The desolation and unstoppable influence of capitalism on the countryside is detailed, in... more
What do we know about the friendship between the great Tory and the great Whig? A paper for the Johnson Club and the Edmund Burke Society, 1999
Монография составлена из ранее опубликованных автором статей и материалов по истории и методологии исследования российского дворянства конца XVIII — начала XIX века. В книгу вошли результаты более чем двадцати лет работы. Предлагается... more
Adam Smith closes the first chapter to Theory of Moral Sentiments, 'Of Sympathy', with a harmless enough assertion: 'We sympathize even with the dead'. Death is not a topic that much interests Smith in Theory of Moral Sentiments. With... more
Of all the centuries in Indian history, perhaps the best worked upon and the most delved into is the 18th century. When greater-than-India sized Mughal Empire began to shrink with the demise of its most celebrated expansionist in 1707,... more
Abstract Every culture has its own philosophical explanation about the afterlife or about death. All such explanations express death as meaningful and need to be expressive. Grief and other concepts in these expressions can be read... more
Cet article se veut un outil précis et fouillé à l’usage des chercheurs souhaitant approfondir le domaine de la petite guerre et des troupes légères (mise à jour, 2005). Depuis un article d’André Martel paru dans la « Revue Historique »... more
"Recent claims that the eighteenth-century men-midwives William Smellie and William Hunter had women murdered to order, to provide the illustrations for their impressive atlases of obstetrics, raise fresh questions about how medical... more
The Order del Toboso was a Jacobite social order. In this chapter the author argues that they remained committed Jacobites, but adopted a pragmatic approach and actively discouraged their family and friends from losing all in rash... more
This paper examines the relationship between the aesthetic thought of Joseph Addison and Richard Steele and early modern virtuoso culture. It argues that both Addison and Steele did not reject virtuoso culture so much as to attempt to... more
This article focuses on the critical reception of Robert Burns from 1796 to 1828. It explores how the concept of genius influenced the perception of Burns as it was represented by critics and editors throughout the time period. Testimony... more
Post-medieval crypts have been overlooked as resources worthy of study; their investigation has only recently been recognised as important within the wider context of funerary research and archaeology. This thesis examined the coffins and... more
This paper explores the evolution of the modern political cartoon, from the earliest days of print culture, through five nominal 'centuries' of form: the “Long Sixteenth Century” of “flysheets” & pamphlets; the Eighteenth Century of... more
Publisher's summary The English economy underwent profound changes in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, yet the worldly affairs of ordinary people continued to be shaped as much by traditional ideals and moral codes as by... more
Accounts of Robert Burns's reading are well-documented in his correspondence, where he frequently attests to his enjoyment of three books in particular: John Moore's Zeluco and Henry Mackenzie's The Man of Feeling and The Man of the... more
This is a revision of earlier (2009) paper ‘In Matthew Boulton’s orbit: Joseph Barney of Wolverhampton’. It presents the life, collaboration with Matthew Boulton's Soho factory and other artistic achievements of 18th-19th centuries... more
ABSTRACT in English: "‘Partisan warfare’, ‘war in detachment’: the ‘petite guerre’ seen from England (18th century)" The article aims to measure and to explain the gradual realisation, in Great Britain during the 18th century, of the... more
This is a book of collected first-hand source material exploring Scotland's place within its union with England. The idea was to try to find those who were in favour of the union but felt they had a duty to make it a more equal union by... more
On September 7, 1714 Claude Hector de Villars and Prince Eugen of Savoy signed a peace contract in the town of Baden in Switzerland. It's aim was to confirm the contracts of Utrecht (1713) and Rastatt (1714) that had put an end to the war... more
This published article aims to be an accurate and detailed tool for the researchers who want to study the subject of the “petite guerre” and the light troops (update 2005). Since the historian André Martel published in 1971 his article... more
This essay presents a detailed analysis of the works of three labouring-class poets who wrote in the "shadow" of Robert Burns: John Lapraik, David Sillar, and Janet Little. It assesses the influence of Burns upon their literary... more
Like its famous predecessor, Robinson Crusoe, Daniel Defoe’s Moll Flanders is a story of survival. But instead of being shipwrecked on an uninhabited island ‘near the Mouth of the Great River of Oroonoque’, the novel’s protagonist... more
ABSTRACT in English (the book is written in French): This book presents a thorough analysis and a case study upon the "petite guerre" in the 18th century Europe - tactical and operational levels dealt with, as also relations between war... more
This paper analyses the socio-cultural impact of George Whitefield and the Great Awakening upon 18th century Anglo-American culture. The experience of the new birth deeply affected both Britain and the thirteen colonies.
This article attributes the relative lack of attention to the ‘public sphere’ in Geoffrey Holmes's work to the pervasive influence of Lewis Namier and the Namierite conception of political history. Holmes's British Politics can be... more