18th Century history

  • Bloomsbury Square and the Gordon Riots

    Bloomsbury Square and the Gordon Riots

    For almost 20 years, Bloomsbury Square has been the home to the History of Parliament. In the latest post for the Georgian Lords, Dr Robin Eagles considers the history of the square in one of its most turbulent periods. Bloomsbury…

  • How did the routes of political processions and protest marches evolve in London during the nineteenth century?

    How did the routes of political processions and protest marches evolve in London during the nineteenth century?

    At the IHR Parliaments, Politics and People seminar on 20 May 2025, Professor Katrina Navickas of the University of Hertfordshire will be discussing ‘The development of political processions and protest marches in London, 1780-1939’. The seminar takes place on 20 May…

  • ‘of all others most desirable’: Pitt the Younger and elections for Cambridge

    ‘of all others most desirable’: Pitt the Younger and elections for Cambridge

    From the onset of his lengthy political career, William Pitt the Younger had his eyes fixed on representing his alma mater, the University of Cambridge. Writing to his mother in July 1779, he observed that the University seat was ‘of…

  • The Speaker’s House and the Evolution of the Speakership, 1794–1834

    The Speaker’s House and the Evolution of the Speakership, 1794–1834

    At the IHR Parliaments, Politics and People seminar on 6 May 2025, Dr Murray Tremellen of York Museums Trust will be discussing ‘The Speaker’s House and the Evolution of the Speakership, 1794–1834’ . The seminar takes place on 6 May…

  • Some thoughts on William Pulteney, earl of Bath

    Some thoughts on William Pulteney, earl of Bath

    The 31 May 2025 marks Dr Stuart Handley’s last day at the History of Parliament. One of his last biographies for The House of Lords, 1715-90 has been William Pulteney, earl of Bath. It will be the third History of…

  • The Last of the Jacobites: Henry Benedict

    The Last of the Jacobites: Henry Benedict

    Henry Benedict, Cardinal York (1725-1807), born 300 years ago this March, was the last member of the royal family to take an active role in a papal Conclave, when he participated in the election of Pope Pius VII at Venice…

  • Background to the American Revolution

    Background to the American Revolution

    As part of a new infrequent series on the American Revolution and its connection to Parliament, Dr Robin Eagles explores the immediate background to the Revolution, and early Parliamentary debates surrounding it in February 1775. At the beginning of 1775,…

  • Robert Burns in Edinburgh: peers, patrons, and politics

    Robert Burns in Edinburgh: peers, patrons, and politics

    In the wake of Burns Night, it is worth considering how the patronage of a small number of Scottish nobles helped Robert Burns become established as the national bard. In his latest piece for the Georgian Lords, Dr Charles Littleton,…

  • A ‘cook’d up’ affair: Queen Charlotte’s 1794 Epiphany Ball

    A ‘cook’d up’ affair: Queen Charlotte’s 1794 Epiphany Ball

    The Court of George III and Queen Charlotte has often been characterized as a rather dull affair, a stark contrast to the more glitzy events on offer in the household of their son, the Prince of Wales. Just how ad…

  • Somerset v Stewart, 1772: an End to Slavery in Britain? 

    Somerset v Stewart, 1772: an End to Slavery in Britain? 

    The campaigning activities of abolitionist MPs such as William Wilberforce and Thomas Fowell Buxton are well-known, but one former MP, who had become a member of the House of Lords, was involved in this question in a rather different way.…

  • A Meddlesome Mother? Queen Charlotte and the Regency Crisis

    A Meddlesome Mother? Queen Charlotte and the Regency Crisis

    In October 1788, George III fell ill with an unknown ‘malady’ which rendered him unable to fulfil his duties as sovereign: the beginning of the king’s famous ‘madness’. In the latest post for the Georgian Lords, we welcome Dr Natalee…

  • The Last of the Cromwells

    The Last of the Cromwells

    The current BBC production of Wolf Hall: the Mirror and the Light, the last of Hilary Mantel’s novels charting the rise and fall of Thomas Cromwell, is a reminder that Cromwell’s dynasty did not end with him on the block.…