To what extent does the strength of government resolve explain the decline in demand for reform in the years 1785-1830? Flashcards
What are the factors that need to be discussed?
Government resolve within parliament Government action against protesters Hunger politics/ improving economy Dominance of the tory party External factors
Describe parliament in 1785
Not supportive of radical change or reform to the parliamentary system
What shows that parliament in 1785 was not supportive of radical change or reform to the parliamentary system?
Pitt’s proposal to disenfranchise 36 of the worst boroughs and redistribute their seats to larger counties was defeated by 74 votes in commons.
In 1785, what were few MPs not motivated to do?
Change the system from which they benefitted
What in the 1820s shows that Parliament was still just as opposed to parliamentary reform as it was in the 1780s?
1822 Whig Leader John Russel sought to introduce a bill designed to disenfranchise 100 of Britain’s most rotten boroughs, yet this received no support from the Tory government and failed by a large majority.
1822 Whig Leader John Russel’s failed bill is symptomatic of what?
the continued aristocratic conservatism of government that meant that people did not demand reform because they knew that they wouldn’t get it
When was the highly reactionary period of government?
1815-21
What were there not during the majority of the 1820s which suggests government approach thought the 1810s had worked?
Truly threatening protests
What ensured that there were no serious challenges to government’s authority until the end of the wars in 1815?.
Treason Act 1795 allowed for the use of the death penalty in any reasonable activity, including political meetings and the publication of seditious material that might challenge gov’s authority.
When did war outbreak with France?
1793
What did the outbreak of war with France replace?
Any sense of revolutionary spirit with a strong sense of patriotism which reinforced the existing status quo and brought more rigorous government control
What strengthened the hand of a government that was increasingly alarmed at the threatening discontent?
December 1819 6 acts
What, a part of the 6 acts, did the Seditious meetings prevention act do?
Banned public meetings of more than 50 people
What, a part of the 6 acts, gave power to search for and seize arms?
Raw Seizure of Arms Act
What, a part of the 6 acts, introduced a tax on newspapers to make them more expensive and what were newspapers who did not pay this tax known as?
The Newspaper and Stamp Duties Act
What did the The Newspaper and Stamp duties Act do?
introduced a 4d tax on newspapers to make them more expensive
What was the purpose of the The Newspaper and Stamp duties Act?
To stop the spread of radical and revolutionary information, which they saw as something the drove the French Revolution
By silencing those who made speeches (sedition), what did the government remove?
A key component of the revolutionary structure
When was peterloo?
August 1819
Who spoke at peterloo?
Henry Hunt
How many at peterloo?
60 000
Who were sent to suppress Henry Hunt’s peterloo?
Manchester Yeomanry