Cambridge Under Queen Anne
Author: Ambrose Bonwicke
Publisher:
Published: 1911
Total Pages: 748
ISBN-13:
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Author: Ambrose Bonwicke
Publisher:
Published: 1911
Total Pages: 748
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Judith Lissauer Cromwell
Publisher: McFarland
Published: 2019-02-28
Total Pages: 271
ISBN-13: 147663582X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKQueen Anne (1665-1714) was not charismatic, brilliant or beautiful, but under her rule, England rose from the chaos of regicide, civil war and revolution to the cusp of global supremacy. She fought a successful overseas war against Europe's superpower and her moderation kept the crown independent of party warfare at home. This biography reveals Anne Stuart as resolute, kind and practical--a woman who surmounted personal tragedy and poor health to become a popular and effective ruler.
Author: Joseph Hone
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 2017-12-08
Total Pages: 186
ISBN-13: 0192543814
DOWNLOAD EBOOKLiterature and Party Politics at the Accession of Queen Anne is the first detailed study of the final Stuart succession crisis. It demonstrates for the first time the centrality of debates about royal succession to the literature and political culture of the early eighteenth century. Using previously neglected, misunderstood, and newly discovered material, Joseph Hone shows that arguments about Anne's right to the throne were crucial to the construction of nascent party political identities. Literary texts were the principal vehicle through which contemporaries debated the new queen's legitimacy. This book sheds fresh light on canonical authors such as Daniel Defoe, Alexander Pope, and Joseph Addison by setting their writing alongside the work of lesser known but nonetheless important figures such as John Tutchin, William Pittis, Nahum Tate, John Dennis, Henry Sacheverell, Charles Leslie, and other anonymous and pseudonymous authors. Through close historical analysis, it shows how this new generation of poets, preachers, and pamphleteers transformed older models of succession writing by Milton, Dryden, and others, and imbued conventional genres such as panegyric and satire with their own distinctive poetics. By immersing the major authors in their milieu, and reconstructing the political and material contexts in which those authors wrote, Literature and Party Politics demonstrates the vitality of debates about royal succession in early eighteenth-century culture.
Author: Thomas McGeary
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Published: 2022-07-26
Total Pages: 445
ISBN-13: 1783277157
DOWNLOAD EBOOKExplores the political meanings that Italian opera - its composers, agents and institutions - had for audiences in eighteenth-century Britain.
Author: Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons
Publisher:
Published: 1818
Total Pages: 440
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: William Matthews
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Published: 2023-04-28
Total Pages: 376
ISBN-13: 0520320719
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1950.
Author: Paula McDowell
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 1998
Total Pages: 364
ISBN-13: 9780198184492
DOWNLOAD EBOOKMuch new information is included in this study of the lives of women of middling to lower-class status, living in the London of the 17th and 18th centuries. The book focuses on their activities as authors, booksellers, hawkers, printers & singers.
Author: Lucy Pollard
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Published: 2015-01-28
Total Pages: 378
ISBN-13: 0857737996
DOWNLOAD EBOOKGreece and Asia Minor proved an irresistible lure to English visitors in the seventeenth century. These lands were criss-crossed by adventurers, merchants, diplomats and men of the cloth. In particular, John Covel (1638-1722) - chaplain to the Levant Company in the 1670s, later Master of Christ's College, Cambridge - was representative of a thoroughly eccentric band of Englishmen who saw Greece and the Ottoman world through the lens of classical history. Using a variety of sources, including Covel's largely unpublished diaries, Lucy Pollard shows that these curious travellers imported, alongside their copies of Pausanias and Strabo, a package of assumptions about the societies they discovered. Disparaging contemporary Greeks as unworthy successors to their classical ancestors allowed Englishmen to view themselves as the true inheritors of classical culture, even as - when opportunity arose - they removed antiquities from the sites they described. At the same time, they often admired the Turks, about whom they had fewer preconceptions. This is a major contribution to reception and post-Restoration ideas about antiquity.
Author:
Publisher: BRILL
Published: 1993
Total Pages: 192
ISBN-13: 9004456686
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: James Anderson Winn
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Published: 2014-06-03
Total Pages: 656
ISBN-13: 0199372217
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAs the last Stuart monarch, Queen Anne (1665-1714) received the education thought proper for a princess, reading plays and poetry in English and French while learning dancing, singing, acting, drawing, and instrumental music. As an adult, she played the guitar and the harpsichord, danced regularly, and took a connoisseur's interest in all the arts. In this comprehensive interdisciplinary biography, James Winn tells the story of Anne's life in new breadth and detail, and in unprecedented cultural context. Winn shows how poets, painters, and musicians used the works they made for Anne to send overt and covert political messages to the queen, the court, the church, and Parliament. Their works also illustrate the pathos of Anne's personal life: the loss of her mother when she was six, her troubled relations with her father and her sister (James II and Mary II), and her own doomed efforts to produce an heir. Her eighteen pregnancies produced only one child who lived past infancy; his death at the age of eleven, mourned by poets, was a blow from which Anne never fully recovered. Her close friendship with Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough, a topic of scabrous ballads and fictions, ended in bitter discord; the death of her husband in 1708 left her emotionally isolated; and the wrangling among her chief ministers hastened her death. Richly illustrated with visual and musical examples, Queen Anne draws on works by a wide array of artists-among them the composer George Frideric Handel, the poet Alexander Pope, the painter Godfrey Kneller, and the architect Christopher Wren-to shed new light on Anne's life and reign. This is the definitive biography of Queen Anne.