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Preface | p. x |
Acknowledgements | p. xii |
Chronology | p. xiii |
Who's Who | p. xxii |
Glossary | p. xxxiv |
Analysis | p. 1 |
Introduction | p. 3 |
1815 and All That | p. 3 |
The Political Landscape | p. 4 |
British Society in 1815 | p. 5 |
Britain in Crisis? 1815-20 | p. 10 |
Lord Liverpool, his Ministry and its Parliamentary Opponents | p. 10 |
The Revival of Radical Politics, 1815-17 | p. 15 |
Peterloo and the Cato Street Conspiracy | p. 22 |
The Curious Affair of Queen Caroline | p. 29 |
The Achievement of Stability? 1821-7 | p. 34 |
The Return of Prosperity | p. 34 |
'Liberal Toryism?' The Achievement of Lord Liverpool | p. 38 |
Trade, Taxation and Finance | p. 44 |
Law Reform | p. 50 |
The Metropolitan Police | p. 53 |
Trade Unions | p. 55 |
Britain's Influence Abroad | p. 57 |
Foreign Policy under Viscount Castlereagh | p. 57 |
Foreign Policy under Canning | p. 63 |
Stability Shattered 1827-32 | p. 69 |
The Break-up of the Tory Party, 1827-30 | p. 69 |
Religious Reforms, 1828-9 | p. 76 |
Economic Distress and Political Organization, 1829-30 | p. 81 |
The Return of the Whigs and the Reform Crisis, 1830-2 | p. 87 |
Conclusion | p. 98 |
Putting Parliamentary Reform in Context | p. 98 |
Assessing the Whig interpretation of 'Britain 1815-32' | p. 99 |
Transition to a New Order? | p. 100 |
Documents | p. 105 |
Lord Liverpool Defends the Corn Law, 1815 | p. 106 |
A Petition against the Income Tax, 1816 | p. 106 |
George IV Considers Dismissing Lord Liverpool, 1820 | p. 107 |
Sir John Sinclair Defends the Agricultural Interest, 1822 | p. 107 |
A Statement from Buckinghamshire on the Agricultural Depression, 1822 | p. 108 |
The Earl of Thanet's Unsympathetic View of the Agricultural Depression, 1822 | p. 108 |
The Annual Register Celebrates Britain's Commercial Advance, 1824 | p. 109 |
William Huskisson Explains the Value of Tariff Reductions | p. 109 |
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine Attacks Free Trade Ideas, 1830 | p. 110 |
George Canning Expresses his Reservations about the Congress System, 1818 | p. 111 |
The Castlereagh State Paper of May 1820 | p. 111 |
The Annual Register Identifies the Benefits of Close Relations with South America, 1825 | p. 112 |
Canning Briefs the Consul-General of Buenos Aires, 1823 | p. 112 |
Canning's Reasons for Intervention in Portugal, 1826 | p. 113 |
Tory Uncertainties After the Departure of Lord Liverpool, 1827 | p. 113 |
Samuel Bamford on the Influence of William Cobbett in 1816 | p. 114 |
Cobbett's Address to the Journeymen and Labourers, 1816 | p. 115 |
An Attack on Cobbett, 1817 | p. 116 |
Advertising the Spa Fields Meeting of December 1816 | p. 117 |
A Call to Arms in 1816 | p. 118 |
The Report of the Committee of Secrecy, February 1817 | p. 118 |
A Radical Attack on Levels of Taxation, 1819 | p. 119 |
Radical Freethought in the 1820s | p. 119 |
The Repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts Attacked, 1828 | p. 120 |
Sir Robert Peel Concedes Roman Catholic Emancipation, 1829 | p. 120 |
Perspectives on the Fight for Norwich during the 1830 General Election | p. 121 |
Wellington Misjudges the Public Mood, 1830 | p. 123 |
A Hostile View of Political Unions, 1831 | p. 124 |
Earl Grey Uses the Middle Classes to Press his Case for Parliamentary Reform, 1831 | p. 125 |
Sir Robert Inglis and T.B. Macaulay Debate the Reform Question, 1831 | p. 125 |
An Immediate Response to the Presentation of the Government's Reform Bill, 1831 | p. 126 |
An Appraisal of Macaulay's Debating Style, 1831 | p. 127 |
The Political Influence of the Established Church, 1831 | p. 128 |
An Attack on Established Authority without Contemporary Understanding, 1832 | p. 128 |
The Days of May and the Likely Return of Wellington as Prime Minister, 1832 | p. 129 |
John Wilson Croker Encounters Manchester Working Men, 1832 | p. 129 |
The Duke of Wellington Considers the Likely Consequences of Reform, 1832 | p. 130 |
Further Reading | p. 132 |
References | p. 143 |
Index | p. 149 |
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