English Society, 1660–1832

This is a revised and extensively rewritten edition of a work first published in 1985 as English Society 1688–1832. That book arrived at the opening of a new phase in English historiography, which questioned much of the received picture of English society as secular, modernising, contractarian, and middle class; it began the recovery of the ‘long eighteenth century’, the period which saw a form of state defined by the close relationship of monarchy, aristocracy and church. In particular, it placed religion at the centre of social and intellectual life, and used ecclesiastical history to illuminate many historical themes more commonly examined in a secular framework. In its updated form, this book reinforces these theses with new evidence, which extends its arguments into fresh areas of enquiry.

• An extensively revised version of one of the classic books of modern historiography, first published in 1985 to resounding critical admiration • The only work available which covers such a lengthy period and which openly rejects Marxist/reductionist/Whig-Liberal interpretations of English history • The first and still unique book to systematically reintegrate religious history into secular areas of English history

Contents

Introduction: the nature of the Old Order; 1. From restoration to reconciliation, 1660–1760; 2. The social and ideological premises of the old order; 3. National identity: the matrix of Church and State; 4. Before radicalism: the religious origins of disaffection, 1688–1800; 5. The old order on the eve of its demise: slow erosion; 6. The end of the Protestant constitution, 1800–1832: sudden collapse.

Reviews

‘It will force a revision of most of our accepted ideas on the eighteenth century.’ John Kenyon, on the first edition

‘… as bold, as brave, as exciting a book as I have read on the eighteenth century this decade. It breaks the mould of Hanoverian politics.’ John Morrill, on the first edition