This expansive history of the origins of majority rule in modern representative government charts the emergence of majority voting as a global standard for decision-making in popular assemblies. Majority votes had, of course, been held prior to 1642, but not since antiquity had they been held with any frequency by a popular assembly with responsibility for the fate of a nation. The crucial moment in the global triumph of majority rule was its embrace by the elected assemblies of early modern Britain and its empire. William J. Bulman analyzes its sudden appearance in the English House of Commons and its adoption by the elected assemblies of Britain's Atlantic colonies in the age of the English, Glorious, and American Revolutions. These events made it overwhelmingly likely that the United Kingdom, the United States, and their former dependencies would become and remain fundamentally majoritarian polities. Providing an insightful commentary on the state of democratic governance today, this study sheds light on the nature, promise, and perils of majority rule.
royal. schoolroom,. 1422–1509. After Henry VII (1457–1509) had triumphed at the battle of Bosworth in August 1485, he was anxious to buttress his weak genealogical claim to the throne. The first step was to establish a viable line of ...
23 For a discussion of this episode, see Jane Moody, Illegitimate theatre in London, 1770–1840 (Cambridge, 2000). ... 34 For fuller discussion, see Bridget Orr, British Enlightenment theatre: dramatizing difference (Cambridge, 2019), ...
On lay reading see inter alia Alec Ryrie, Being Protestant in Reformation Britain (Oxford, 2013), ch. 11; Kate Narveson, Bible Readers and Lay Writers in Early Modern England (Abingdon, 2016); Narveson, '“Their practice bringeth little ...
233. 74 Ohlmeyer, Civil War and Restoration, pp. 27, 47, 75. 75 Cunningham, 'Political and Social Change', p. 285. 76 Mary O'Dowd, Power, Politics and Land: Early Modern Sligo, early modern ireland and english imperialism 47.
a government based on the Roman model with its focus on good citizens ' virtues and their civic engagement in the life of the ... see W. J. Bulman , The Rise of Majority Rule in Early Modern Britain and Its Empire ( Cambridge , 2021 ) .
It was evidentalready, as a master of nineteenth-century British history noted, that “neither the institutions, nor the ideas, that had been inherited from the eighteenth ... A History of Everyday Life in Scotland, 1800 to 1900, 2010.
In this book, William J. Bulman and Robert G. Ingram bring together recent scholarship from distinguished experts in history, theology, and literature to make clear that God not only survived the Enlightenment but thrived within it as well.
The present collection brings together a series of studies by Peter Marshall on British imperial expansion in the later 18th century. Some essays focus on the thirteen North American colonies,...
... PH, 22.3 (2003), 217–41; Michael Braddick, State Formation in Early Modern England c.1550–1700 (Cambridge, 2000). See also: William J. Bulman, The Rise of Majority Rule in Early Modern Britain and its Empire (Cambridge, 2021).
Addison wrote the Plea in the midst of the furore over Herbert Croft's Naked truth, a bishop's appeal for toleration within the church, and Marvell's attack on Croft's assailants in Mr. Smirke.91 Critiques of the clerical order were ...