
- 368 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
The Story of Leeds
About this book
A richly illustrated history that explores every aspect of life in Leeds. This new history of Leeds covers all the main political, social and economic developments of the city: The Harrying of the North devastated the surrounding area in 1069; the Civil War saw a battle fought in the town itself; cholera and typhus epidemics raged in the nineteenth century; the building of the Middleton Railway in 1758 established the oldest railway in the world; and Richard Oastler, the Factory King, launched the campaign for the Ten Hour Bill in the Leeds Mercury. Due emphasis is given to the place of the wool textile industry, the principal industry until the twentieth century. The story is brought right up to date, as are recent changes in the townscape. An intriguing look at this great city's remarkable history.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Introduction and Acknowledgements
- one A Place Called Loidis
- two Newcomers to the Valley
- three The End of Feudalism
- four Turbulence and Terror 1600–1645
- five Interregnum and Restoration
- six Leeds and the Age of Enlightenment
- seven Leeds and the Age of Revolution
- eight A Town Divided
- nine Civic Pride
- ten Momentous Century
- eleven A New Elizabethan Age
- Notes
- Bibliography
- The Thoresby Society
- Copyright