Aristocratic Government and Society in Eighteenth-century England: The Foundations of StabilityDaniel A. Baugh "Miege, G. The present state of Great Britain: an eighteenth-century self-portrait.--Swift, J. The Examiner no. 14: a Tory view of war and the moneyed interest.--Wrigley, E. A. A simple model of London's importance in changing English society and economy, 1650-1750.--Habakkuk, H. J. England's nobility--Plumb, J. H. Robert Walpole's world: the structure of government.--Sutherland, L. The City of London in eighteenth-century politics.--Hughes, E. The professions in the eighteenth century.--Namier, Sir L. The social foundations." |
Contents
An EighteenthCentury SelfPortrait | 29 |
A Tory View of War and the Moneyed Interest | 60 |
Englands Nobility | 96 |
Copyright | |
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administration agricultural Alderman aristocracy army bibliography birth borough Britain British Burke Cambridge Charles Church City coal Colonies commercial Court Crown dissenters Duke E. A. Wrigley Earl Economic History Review eenth century eighteenth century eighteenth-century England election English society Essays force gentlemen gentry Geoffrey Holmes George George III growth of London House of Commons hundred Ibid important income increase industrial revolution influence J. H. Plumb James John justice King King's knights landed families landowners Lewis Namier living Lord marriage ment merchants modern nation nature Newcastle nobility opposition Oxford Parliament parliamentary parliamentary opposition party patronage peace peerage peers period political population profession rise royal Samson Gideon secure seventeenth century Sir Charles Turner Sir Lewis Namier social thousand pounds tion Tory town trade traditional Treasury Walpole Walpole's wealth Whig William