Conflict and Stability in Scottish Society, 1700-1850
eBook - ePub

Conflict and Stability in Scottish Society, 1700-1850

  1. 300 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Conflict and Stability in Scottish Society, 1700-1850

About this book

Between the early eighteenth and the middle decades of the nineteenth century, Scottish society was transformed by industrialisation, urbanisation and major changes in agriculture and rural society. The rate of town and city growth was among the fastest in western Europe, migration and emigration accelerated and the traditional way of life in the Highland and Lowland countryside was brought to an end through the pressures of market demand and landlord strategy. Such a major upheaval created increased social tension. Conflict and Stabilitiy in Scottish Society challenges the previously accepted view that this major upheaval in Scottish life did not stimulate much unrest and that a modern industrial society developed relatively smoothly. The papers here, given at the Scottish Historical Studies Seminar at Strathclyde University in 1988–89, suggest that protest was more common, more enduring and more diverse than is usually supposed.

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Yes, you can access Conflict and Stability in Scottish Society, 1700-1850 by Tom M. Devine in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & Scottish History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
John Donald
Year
2001
eBook ISBN
9781788854061

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Preface
  6. Contributors
  7. Contents
  8. 1. How tame were the Scottish Lowlanders during the Eighteenth Century?
  9. 2. From Reformers to ā€˜Jacobins’: The Scottish Association of the Friends of the People
  10. 3. The Failure of Radical Reform in Scotland in the Late Eighteenth Century: the Social and Economic Context
  11. 4. Political Reform and the ā€˜Ordering’ of Middle-Class Protest
  12. 5. Protest in the Pews. Interpreting Presbyterianism and Society in Fracture During the Scottish Economic Revolution
  13. 6. Early Chartism in Scotland: A ā€˜Moral Force’ Movement?
  14. 7. Continuity and Challenge: The Perpetuation of the Landed Interest
  15. Index