The Monarchy and the British Nation, 1780 to the Present

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Andrzej Olechnowicz
Cambridge University Press, 2007 M11 29 - 327 páginas
The monarchy has remained important in British public life long after monarchs ceased, in the early nineteenth century, to govern as well as to reign, and popular legitimacy came to be founded on representation, not the immutability of a sacred hierarchy. This book addresses two fundamental questions about the British monarchy in the modern period. What has been its function in the political and social life of the nation? Why, for much but by no means all of the modern period, has it been so popular with its subjects? Leading historians offer contributions on the monarchy and public values, the monarchy's popularity, the monarchy and Ireland, the monarchy and film, gender and the monarchy, the royal court and republicanism, and the monarchy and the wider world. These essays shed considerable new light on the monarchy's place in British public life and on the broader social and political history of modern Britain.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

Sección 1
47
Sección 2
76
Sección 3
108
Sección 4
117
Sección 5
131
Sección 6
139
Sección 7
163
Sección 8
212
Sección 11
223
Sección 12
227
Sección 13
247
Sección 14
258
Sección 15
267
Sección 16
272
Sección 17
275
Sección 18
276

Sección 9
213
Sección 10
218
Sección 19
280

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Acerca del autor (2007)

Andrzej Olechnowicz is Lecturer in Modern British History at the University of Durham. He is the author of Working-Class Housing in England between the Wars: The Becontree Estate (1997).

Información bibliográfica