Leaders in the Lords: Government Management and Party Organization in the Upper Chamber, 1765-1902, Volume 22, Part 1

Front Cover
Richard W. Davis
Edinburgh University Press for The Parliamentary History Yearbook Trust, 2003 - Political Science - 105 pages
The history of the House of Lords in the modern period (and earlier) has been neglected too long. The Lords' importance in British politics in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, especially after 1832, is routinely dismissed, with arguments that are none the better for being hoary with age and endlessly repeated. The reform act of 1832 did not reduce the power of the Lords. In fact, the upper House presented a greater challenge to administrations after 1832 than it had before. Governments had to take the Lords into account, to make concessions, and sometimes to accept defeat. By examining the careers of six important leaders of the house of lords in the period from 1765 to 1902, their objectives, their strategies, and their successes and failures, we hope to promote a better understanding of the House of Lords in this period.

About the author (2003)

Richard W. Davis is Emeritus Professor of History at Washington University, St. Louis. His previous books include Political Change and Continuity, 1760-1815: A Buckinghamshire Study (1972), Disraeli (1976) and The English Rothschilds (1983).

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