The Works of Benjamin Hoadly
Author: Benjamin Hoadly
Publisher:
Published: 1773
Total Pages: 1016
ISBN-13:
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Author: Benjamin Hoadly
Publisher:
Published: 1773
Total Pages: 1016
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: David de Boer
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 2023-08-29
Total Pages: 225
ISBN-13: 0198876823
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations. For victims of persecution around the world, attracting international media attention for their plight is often a matter of life and death. This study takes us back to the news revolution of seventeenth-century Europe, when people first discovered in the press a powerful new weapon to combat religiously inspired maltreatments, executions, and massacres. To affect and mobilize foreign audiences, confessional minorities and their advocates faced an acute dilemma, one that we still grapple with today: how to make people care about distant suffering? David de Boer argues that by answering this question, they laid the foundations of a humanitarian culture in Europe. As consuming news became an everyday practice for many Europeans, the Dutch Republic emerged as an international hub of printed protest against religious violence. De Boer traces how a diverse group of people, including Waldensians refugees, Huguenot ministers, Savoyard office holders, and many others, all sought access to the Dutch printing presses in their efforts to raise transnational solidarity for their cause. By generating public outrage, calling out rulers, and pressuring others to intervene, producers of printed opinion could have a profound impact on international relations. But crying out against persecution also meant navigating a fraught and dangerous political landscape, marked by confessional tension, volatile alliances, and incessant warfare. Opinion makers had to think carefully about the audiences they hoped to reach through pamphlets, periodicals, and newspapers. But they also had to reckon with the risk of reaching less sympathetic readers outside their target groups. By examining early modern publicity strategies, de Boer deepens our understanding of how people tried to shake off the spectre of religious violence that had haunted them for generations, and create more tolerant societies, governed by the rule of law, reason, and a sense of common humanity.
Author: Andrew Starkie
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Published: 2007
Total Pages: 272
ISBN-13: 1843832887
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFirst full account of the vital struggle for Church and State in England after the accession of George I.
Author: George Edward Griffiths
Publisher:
Published: 1774
Total Pages: 682
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: D.B. Horn
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2024-11-01
Total Pages: 1008
ISBN-13: 104028485X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKEnglish Historical Documents is the most ambitious, impressive and comprehensive collection of documents on English history ever published. An authoritative work of primary evidence, each volume presents material with exemplary scholarly accuracy. Editorial comment is directed towards making sources intelligible rather than drawing conclusions from them. Full account has been taken of modern textual criticism. A general introduction to each volume portrays the character of the period under review and critical bibliographies have been added to assist further investigation. Documents collected include treaties, personal letters, statutes, military dispatches, diaries, declarations, newspaper articles, government and cabinet proceedings, orders, acts, sermons, pamphlets, agricultural instructions, charters, grants, guild regulations and voting records. Volumes are furnished with lavish extra apparatus including genealogical tables, lists of officials, chronologies, diagrams, graphs and maps.
Author: John Phillip Reid
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 1988
Total Pages: 248
ISBN-13: 9780226708966
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"Liberty was the most cherished right possessed by English-speaking people in the eighteenth century. It was both an ideal for the guidance of governors and a standard with which to measure the constitutionality of government; both a cause of the American Revolution and a purpose for drafting the United States Constitution; both an inheritance from Great Britain and a reason republican common lawyers continued to study the law of England." As John Philip Reid goes on to make clear, "liberty" did not mean to the eighteenth-century mind what it means today. In the twentieth century, we take for granted certain rights—such as freedom of speech and freedom of the press—with which the state is forbidden to interfere. To the revolutionary generation, liberty was preserved by curbing its excesses. The concept of liberty taught not what the individual was free to do but what the rule of law permitted. Ultimately, liberty was law—the rule of law and the legalism of custom. The British constitution was the charter of liberty because it provided for the rule of law. Drawing on an impressive command of the original materials, Reid traces the eighteenth-century notion of liberty to its source in the English common law. He goes on to show how previously problematic arguments involving the related concepts of licentiousness, slavery, arbitrary power, and property can also be fit into the common-law tradition. Throughout, he focuses on what liberty meant to the people who commented on and attempted to influence public affairs on both sides of the Atlantic. He shows the depth of pride in liberty—English liberty—that pervaded the age, and he also shows the extent—unmatched in any other era or among any other people—to which liberty both guided and motivated political and constitutional action.
Author: James Ludovic Lindsay Earl of Crawford
Publisher:
Published: 1910
Total Pages: 1572
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Jonathan Swift
Publisher:
Published: 1859
Total Pages: 680
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: William Thomas
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Published: 2024-07-31
Total Pages: 1669
ISBN-13: 1040156134
DOWNLOAD EBOOKPresents the candid diary of Thomas Macaulay, Victorian statesman, historian and author of "The History of England". This work shows how, spanning the period 1838 to 1859, the journal is the longest work from Macaulay's pen. It states that these unique manuscripts held at Trinity College, Cambridge, are most revealing of all his writings.
Author: Jonathan Swift
Publisher:
Published: 1814
Total Pages: 492
ISBN-13:
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