From Gladstone to Asquith: The Late Victorian Pattern of Liberal Leadership
From 1868 until 1916, writes Roy Jenkins, in the days of high Imperialism, the Liberal Party held office at Westminster for no less than twenty-five years.
From 1868 until 1916, writes Roy Jenkins, in the days of high Imperialism, the Liberal Party held office at Westminster for no less than twenty-five years.
W.O. Henderson and W.H. Chalonert describe how it was from incomplete evidence, and in a spirit of political prejudice, that Engels compiled his famous account of the condition of the British working-classes.
W. Bruce Lincoln describes how the European Revolutions of 1848 alarmed the Russian Government so much, it sent its armies to aid the Habsburgs in Hungary.
Traders and missionaries from Europe, writes Sarah Searight, settled on the islands many years before official annexation.
Patricia Wright describes how the French arrival upon the Upper Nile caused an international crisis.
H.T. Dickinson & Kenneth Logue describe the events of a Scottish protest against the Act of Union with England.
Alaric Jacob introduces the soldiers and administrators who prepared the way for nineteenth-century Empire.
W.J. Reader describes a scandalous episode that arose out of the transfer of authority in India from the East India Company to the Crown.
Eighteenth-century men of taste had begun to build themselves mock-medieval houses. Tudor Edwards writes how their descendants carried on the vogue by constructing a series of impressive castles.
Dufferin urged upon an unresponsive government in London moderate proposals for representative reform in India. In fact, writes Briton Martin Jnr., reform was carried out twenty years later; too late, in the light of history.