ENGLISH PEASANTS IN POLITICS 1258–1267Carpenter, D., A.
doi: 10.1093/past/136.1.3pmid: N/A
Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Author notes * I am most grateful to Paul Brand for commenting on a draft of this article. Earlier versions were read to the Anglo-American Conference of Historians in 1985, and to a seminar at the University of Leeds. I have been helped by the points made in the subsequent discussions. © The Past and Present Society, oxford
SUCCESS AND FAILURE DURING THE FIRST CENTURY OF THE REFORMATIONParker,, Geoffrey
doi: 10.1093/past/136.1.43pmid: N/A
Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Author notes * An early version of this paper was prepared for the Anglo-Polish Historical Conference held in Warsaw in 1978. My thanks are due to numerous commentators, both then and later: in general to various lecture audiences in Britain, Ireland, Europe and North America; in particular to Simon Adams, Robert Bireley, Thomas A. Brady, James K. Cameron, Patrick Collinson, Nicholas Davidson, Geoffrey Dickens, Alastair Duke, Geoffrey Elton, Carl G. Estabrook, Dermot Fenlon, Christopher R. Friedrichs, Ian Green, Christopher Haigh, John Henderson, James M. Kittelson, Philomena Kilroy, Bruce Lenman, William S. Maltby, Heiko A. Oberman, Jane Ohlmeyer, Wolfgang Reinhard, Bob Scribner, Lesley M. Smith and Gerald A. Strauss. Anyone familiar with the field will immediately realize that all these scholars could scarcely be expected to agree with a single interpretation of Reformation history, whether offered by me or anyone else. It may be that none of them will wish to accept my argument; certainly none of them should be held responsible for my errors. But I am still most grateful for all of their comments, criticisms and references. © The Past and Present Society, oxford
VIRTUAL REPRESENTATION: PARLIAMENTARY REPORTING AND LANGUAGES OF CLASS IN THE 1790sWahrman,, Dror
doi: 10.1093/past/136.1.83pmid: N/A
Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Author notes * For comments and suggestions I am grateful to David Armitage, David Bell, Linda Colley, Marcus Daniel, Philip Harling, Paul Hussey-Smith, Joanna Innes, Peter Mandler, Philip Nord, Theodore Rabb, Lawrence Stone, Edward Thompson, Shulamit Volkov and John Wertheimer. © The Past and Present Society, oxford
FESTIVALS OF NATIONAL UNITY IN THE GERMAN REVOLUTION OF 1848–1849Sperber,, Jonathan
doi: 10.1093/past/136.1.114pmid: N/A
Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Author notes * Several earlier versions of this paper were read in different seminars and conferences. I would like to thank the participants for their helpful comments and criticisms, especially, in Cologne, Otto Dann, Dieter Düding, Günter Wollstein and Marcel Seypel; and, in Tübingen, Dieter Langewiesche, Friedrich Lenger, Carola Lipp and Wolfram Siemann. © The Past and Present Society, oxford
CITIZENSHIP, POLITICAL PARTICIPATION AND THE FORMATION OF THE PUBLIC SPHERE IN BUENOS AIRES 1850s–1880sSabato,, Hilda
doi: 10.1093/past/136.1.139pmid: N/A
Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Author notes * This article was written while in residence at the Princeton Institute for Advanced Study. I wish to thank colleagues at the Institute who discussed a preliminary version. I am particularly indebted to Gary Gerstle, Jacek Kochanowicz, Peter Wagner and Michael Walzer. Most of the research for this article was carried out in Argentina with the assistance of Ema Cibotti, Elias Palti and Graciela Bonet, and its basic ideas were first discussed with my colleagues at PEHESA-CISEA in Buenos Aires, Leandro Gutiérrez, Juan Carlos Korol, Luis Alberto Romero and Beatriz Sarlo. © The Past and Present Society, oxford
UNIONIST MYTHS 1912–1985Jackson,, Alvin
doi: 10.1093/past/136.1.164pmid: N/A
Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Author notes * I am most grateful to Marianne Elliott and Roy Foster for inviting me to read a draft of this paper to the Conference of Irish Historians in Britain held at York University in April 1990. I am also grateful to Robert Bell of the Linenhall Library, Belfast, for guiding me through the Library's collection of political ephemera. © The Past and Present Society, oxford
MISSIONARIES AND MAGIC IN DARK-AGE EUROPEMurray,, Alexander
doi: 10.1093/past/136.1.186pmid: N/A
Article PDF first page preview Close This content is only available as a PDF. Author notes * Valerie I. J. Flint, The Rise of Magic in Early Medieval Europe (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1991), xii, 452 pp. I would like to thank John Blair and C. E. Stancliffe for help with this review. © The Past and Present Society, oxford