<p>Reviews of the first publication:</p><p>‘…this collection of essays is superb both in conception and in execution.’</p><p>— <b>G. R. Rubin</b>, <i>British Journal of Law and Society, Vol. 8, No. 1</i></p><p>‘…<i>An Ungovernable People</i> is an important and exceptionally coherent collection of essays that should attract not only the increasing number of students of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century crime, but also anyone interested in the social or political history of the period.’</p><p>— <b>Susan Staves</b>, <i>Eighteenth-Century Studies, Vol. 17, No. 1</i></p>
How ungovernable were seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Englishmen? Certainly, the historical evidence attests to an unruly and contumacious populace: riot was widespread, such criminal activities as the counterfeiting of coin flourished, disorder pervaded even London’s gaols, and men at all levels of authority were often hard pressed to enforce the law. On the other hand, the ruling elite had a powerful instrument—the courts—for regulating not only crime but also numerous aspects of social and economic life. Moreover, belief in the value of ‘the rule of law’ was widespread, even among lawbreakers. Knowledge of the law extended far beyond the patrician class, and men from all classes had recourse to the courts.
First published in 1980, An Ungovernable People investigates these paradoxes. Each chapter focusses on a particular source of conflict—village regulation, the price and shipment of grain, the building of turnpike roads, the imprisonment of debtors, the circulation of counterfeit coin—to assess attitudes to ‘the law’ and to authority.
Particular emphasis is placed on the judicial process—how the legal system actually worked; on how often popular protest was an attempt to remind authority of its duties rather than to challenge its legitimacy; and on the way in which law-breaking frequently formed part of a negotiative process between rulers and ruled. These chapters contribute to our understanding of the conflicts that arose when popular notions of what was just or legitimate clashed with authority and the letter of law.
How ungovernable were seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Englishmen? The historical evidence attests to an unruly and contumacious populace. First published in 1980, An Ungovernable People investigates various sources of conflict to assess attitudes to ‘the law’ and to authority.
1. Two concepts of order: justice, constables and jurymen in seventeenth-century England 2. Grain riots and popular attitudes to the law: Maldon and the crisis of 1629 3. ‘A set of ungovernable people’: the Kingswood colliers in the eighteenth century 4. The Wilkites and the law, 1763–74: a study of radical notions of governance 5. ‘Our traitorous money makers’: the Yorkshire coiners and the law, 1760–83 6. The King’s Bench prison in the later eighteenth century: law, authority and order in a London debtors’ prison
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
John Brewer is Emeritus Professor of History and Literature at California Institute of Technology, USA. Brewer's research interests have focused on two areas: issues of value in the visual-art world and questions of travel, tourism, identity, and place. He has had a long-standing interest in the fraught relationship between culture and money, on which he has written extensively during his career.
John Styles is Professor Emeritus in History, University of Hertfordshire, and Honorary Senior Research Fellow, Victoria and Albert Museum, UK. He specializes in the history of early-modern Britain and its colonies, especially the study of material life, manufacturing and design.