The Monarchy and the British Nation, 1780 to the PresentAndrzej Olechnowicz 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. |
Contents
Section 1 | 47 |
Section 2 | 76 |
Section 3 | 108 |
Section 4 | 117 |
Section 5 | 131 |
Section 6 | 139 |
Section 7 | 163 |
Section 8 | 212 |
Section 11 | 223 |
Section 12 | 227 |
Section 13 | 247 |
Section 14 | 258 |
Section 15 | 267 |
Section 16 | 272 |
Section 17 | 275 |
Section 18 | 276 |
Section 9 | 213 |
Section 10 | 218 |
Section 19 | 280 |
Other editions - View all
The Monarchy and the British Nation, 1780 to the Present Andrzej Olechnowicz No preview available - 2007 |
Common terms and phrases
abdication Albert ancien régime argued aristocracy Arnstein Bagehot Baldwin became Britain British monarchy broadcast cabinet government Cambridge Cannadine Catholic cent ceremonial Church constitutional monarchy Contentious Crown context coronation court crisis criticism culture death Diana diary Dublin Duke duty Edward VIII Elizabeth Empire England English Constitution film George III George IV George V's Gladstone Guardian historians History House of Lords Ibid imperial institution Ireland Irish Jubilee King and Queen King Edward VIII King George King's Labour Liberal London marriage Mass-Observation military monar monarchy's moral Nairn national identity nationalist newspapers newsreels nineteenth century Oxford Palace Parliament party political poll prime minister Prince of Wales Princess Prochaska Queen Victoria radical reign republic republican ritual role royal family royal popularity royal visits royalty Salisbury Sandringham social society sovereign symbol Taylor throne tion twentieth century Whig Windsor women Ziegler