The Rage of Party will tell the dramatic and strangely neglected story of Britain's first - and most rambunctious - burst of party politics.
The Rage of Party will tell the dramatic and strangely neglected story of Britain's first - and most rambunctious - burst of party politics.
The late 17th century saw the rise of a new phenomenon that would transform Britain forever: party politics.
Beginning with a furious dispute over whether to allow a Roman Catholic - James II - to become king, the division between Whig and Tory marked the chief political battlelines of a ferociously polarised country for several tumultuous generations.The Rage of Party traces the thrilling story of how these two parties - one representing the established social forces of squire, church and monarchy; the other the rising forces of financial power and Protestant Dissent - settled the defining debates of the age, culminating in a dramatic fight to the death over peace, piety and the Protestant Succession in the age of Queen Anne. Their bitter disputes over religion, economics and the constitution profoundly influenced many of the forces and institutions that shaped the modern world, ranging from the City of London and the Bank of England to the Union between England and Scotland and the British Empire.From vicious pamphlet wars and some of history's most corrupt and riotous elections through a revolution, multiple assassination attempts and enough scandals to make even the most louche modern politician blush, this brilliantly researched book shows how a motley crew of rakes, hypocrites, cunning tricksters and scheming clergymen engaged in not only in a political confrontation that threatened a second civil war, but a culture war that still finds echoes in 21st-century Britain.George Owers is an editor and writer. Educated at Cambridge, where he received his PhD on 18th-century politics, he gained early experience of the viciousness of party rivalry in the low stakes world of local government, becoming a city councillor aged twenty-one. He now lives in the Cambridgeshire countryside. He has written regularly for The Critic and tweets as @CapelLofft. This is his first book.
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