Academic literature on the topic 'Andrew bonar'

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Journal articles on the topic "Andrew bonar"

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Smith, Jeremy. "Bluff, Bluster and brinkmanship: Andrew Bonar Law and the Third Home Rule Bill." Historical Journal 36, no. 1 (March 1993): 161–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x00016150.

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ABSTRACTThe article attempts to show that Bonar Law had an effective and coherent strategy towards home rule. Previous interpretations have stressed his weakness and inexperience, either his ‘pandering’ to the extremists in the Tory party or his readiness to seek a compromise, when civil war began to loom large, in the autumn of 1913. Much of the blame for the political stalemate from 1912 until 1914 is directly, or implicitly, laid upon Bonar Law. Yet the tory leader was a more consummate politician. He sought to use the home rule crisis not only to reinforce his own fragile leadership but to return the Conservatives to office. This he proposed to do by allowing the political system to reach an impasse over home rule, by not helping the Liberals reach a compromise and yet inciting Ulster to resist the bill on its implementation. This left Asquith, the Liberal prime minister, with the impossible choice of imposing the bill onto Ulster (so provoking civil war) or of holding a general election when his government was perceived as unpopular. Bonar Law counted on Asquith preferring to hold an election though Asquith was saved from such a decision by the outbreak of war. It was, then, a ‘high-risk’ strategy to win office for the party he led.
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Adams, R. J. Q. "Andrew Bonar Law and the Fall of the Asquith Coalition: The December 1916 Cabinet Crisis." Canadian Journal of History 32, no. 2 (August 1997): 185–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cjh.32.2.185.

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Finnan, Joseph P. "Punch’s portrayal of Redmond, Carson and the Irish question, 1910–18." Irish Historical Studies 33, no. 132 (November 2003): 424–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400015923.

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The Irish question in the form of home rule reasserted itself in British politics during the years 1910-18, first as the central issue in British political debate, then as a secondary, though still significant, concern for Britain during the First World War. One of Britain’s national institutions, Punch, a weekly magazine of political commentary and satire with a circulation of 100,000, reflected the significance of the Irish question by devoting a great deal of attention during these years to the leaders of the two opposing forces in Irish politics, the Irish nationalist leader John Redmond and the Irish unionist leader Sir Edward Carson. Redmond and Carson became regular members of Punch’s leading cast of characters in its political cartoons in the 1910s, a group which included the Liberal premier H. H. Asquith, his leading ministers David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill, and the opposition leader Andrew Bonar Law.
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Nuttall, Paul A. "‘Liverpool’s first Labour MP’: The Untold Story of the Edge Hill By-election of March 1923." Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire: Volume 170, Issue 1 170, no. 1 (January 1, 2021): 153–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/transactions.170.12.

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A by-election of notable significance took place in Liverpool’s Edge Hill Division in March 1923. The election is of historical importance because it marked the moment when the Labour Party won its first parliamentary seat in Liverpool. It is surprising therefore that the event has not received more assessment, especially as Liverpool now is considered to be a Labour stronghold. The by-election came about in peculiar circumstances, with the sitting Conservative MP being effectively retired by the Prime Minister, Andrew Bonar Law. Subsequently, a candidate, who had no links to Liverpool, was foisted on a reluctant divisional party. By comparison, the Labour Party was more organised, but they were certainly not confident about winning the seat, especially as the Conservatives had a majority of over four-thousand. Although the Labour Party was still relatively weak in the city, the Conservative Party was not the well-oiled election winning machine of yesteryear. The by-election was therefore by no means a forgone conclusion. The by-election campaign, which was fought over a fortnight, was therefore an intense affair. With the Government’s proposed abolition of rent controls, housing was the principal issue, which allowed the Labour Party to capitalise on the fears of the Edge Hill residents. This article is the first an extensive analysis of this historical by-election. It examines the selection of the candidates, and both their qualities and inadequacies. It also analyses the campaign and the aftermath, whilst placing the result in the wider context of both local and national politics.
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WINDSCHEFFEL, ALEX. "MEN OR MEASURES? CONSERVATIVE PARTY POLITICS, 1815–1951 Parliament and politics in the age of Churchill and Attlee: the Headlam diaries, 1935–1951. Edited by Stuart Ball. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press for the Royal Historical Society, Camden 5th ser., 14, 1999. Pp. xiii+665. ISBN 0-521-66143-9. £40.00. Disraeli. By Edgar Feuchtwanger. London: Arnold, 2000. Pp. xii+244. ISBN 0-340-71910-9. £12.99. The self-fashioning of Disraeli, 1818–1851. Edited by Charles Richmond and Paul Smith. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. Pp. ix+212. ISBN 0-521-49729-9. £30.00. Stanley Baldwin. By Philip Williamson. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999. Pp. xvi+378. ISBN 0-521-43227-8. £25.00. Protection and politics: Conservative economic discourse, 1815–1852. By Anna Gambles. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press for the Royal Historical Society, Royal Historical Society Studies in History, n.s., 1999. Pp. xi+291. ISBN 0-86193-244-7. £40.00. Agriculture and politics in England, 1815–1939. Edited by J. R. Wordie. London: Macmillan Press, 2000. Pp. vii+260. ISBN 0-333-74483-7. £47.50." Historical Journal 45, no. 4 (December 2002): 937–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x02002753.

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With his unparalleled genius for self-promotion, Benjamin Disraeli advised us to ‘read no history, nothing but biography, for that is life without theory’. Historians of the British Conservative party have followed his instructions faithfully, long seduced by the charms of the political biography. In recent years alone the world has seen the publication of two scholarly and highly flattering biographies of the third marquess of Salisbury, by Andrew Roberts and David Steele, alongside a reconstruction of the distinctive Salisburian philosophical world by Michael Bentley, and a long overdue biography of Bonar Law by R. J. Q. Adams. Of the newer vintage, we now have Anthony Seldon's biography of John Major and the first instalment of John Campbell's deconstruction of Margaret Thatcher. One can only shudder with trepidation at the unedifying prospect of the weighty and earnest tomes devoted to William Hague or Iain Duncan Smith awaiting tomorrow's historians. The fates and fortunes of the party continue to be intertwined unproblematically with the qualities of its successive leaders. On one level this is inevitable, befitting the self-image of a party which has always valued leadership and hierarchy. But on another level the predilection for biography has encouraged Conservative studies to remain stubbornly immured within a set of sterile and untheoretical paradigms. The tendency is for narration rather than explanation, for ‘party’ to be defined institutionally rather than organically, and for the world of politics to be reduced to conversations held within the hermetic corridors of Westminster. The more imaginative and innovative work on Victorian and Edwardian politics to have appeared in recent years has been carried out by historians of the Liberal and Labour parties.
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Adams, R. J. Q. "Asquith's Choice: The May Coalition and the Coming of Conscription, 1915–1916." Journal of British Studies 25, no. 3 (July 1986): 243–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/385864.

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The enactment into law in January 1916 of the first installment of mandatory military service in modern British history was an event whose importance few scholars dispute. While invariably considered a significant break in the British political and military tradition, recent scholarship has tended to treat the passage of the first Military Service Act as an episode that has little new to tell us about the political rivalry within the coalition cabinet presided over by Herbert Henry Asquith since May 1915. No student of the compulsory service debate can deny that he has been warned off, as Lord Beaverbrook wrote in the late 1920s that close study of the politics of conscription in the Asquith coalition would be “tedious to the last degree.” Most forbidding was the judgment of Lord Blake in his life of the Conservative leader Andrew Bonar Law: “The question of conscription would indeed be a tedious topic to pursue through all its ramifications. The endless discussions, the attitudes taken by public men at various times, the compromises, the disputes, constitute a chapter in English history to which, no doubt in years to come dull history professors will direct their duller research students.”Many historians of the world war who have found the subject less dull than implied above have concluded that it presents a straightforward story: the implementation of conscription came about because the traditional policy of voluntarism had proven insufficient to raise an army of adequate size. The episode has been judged essentially a triumph of the Tory right wing (with the collusion of the maverick Liberal David Lloyd George) over orthodox Liberalism.
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Cabras, Francesco. "Alcune osservazioni a seguito di una nuova edizione del Viaggio della Serenissima S. Bona Regina in Polonia di C. Carmignano." Fabrica Litterarum Polono-Italica, no. 2 (June 30, 2020): 185–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.31261/flpi.2020.02.13.

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The article is a review to Andrea Colelli (ed.), C. Carmignano: Viaggio della Serenissima S. Bona Regina in Polonia, con nota introduttiva di Luigi Marinelli. Roma, 2018. In discussing the edition, proposals are put forward for what the intertextual dimension of the poem is concerned, drawing attention on the similarities between the first ‘capitulo’ of the poem and Joannes Secundus’ elegy I 8, both texts being denied epithalamia.
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Wachtel, Andrew. "One Day–Fifty Years Later." Slavic Review 72, no. 1 (2013): 102–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.5612/slavicreview.72.1.0102.

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November 2012 marks the fiftieth anniversary of the first publication of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's novella Odin den Ivana Denisovicha (One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich) in the Moscow journal Novyi mir. In this article, Andrew Wachtel considers Solzhenitsyn's pathbreaking work in its original publication context. It examines the editorial preface and the two orthodox contemporary works of Soviet socialist realism the editor chose as bookends for One Day, illustrating the ways in which the surrounding literary context serves to emphasize the socialist realist bona fides of the then unknown Solzhenitsyn. The intertextual links connecting One Day with the works that surround it help to demonstrate that at this point in his career, far from being a dissident, Solzhenitsyn could plausibly be read as an appropriate, albeit unusual, representative of official Soviet literature.
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Gippius, Alexey A., and Savva M. Mikheev. "“Assassins of the Great Prince Andrey”: An Inscription about the Murder of Andrey Bogolyubsky from Pereslavl-Zalessky." Slovene 9, no. 2 (2020): 63–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2305-6754.2020.9.2.3.

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The present paper deals with a long inscription which was uncovered in the autumn of 2015 on the external wall of the southern apse of the 12th century Transfiguration Cathedral in Pereslavl-Zalessky. It contains an almost fully legible list of assassins of the Vladimir-Suzdal prince Andrey Yuryevich, who was murdered in Bogolyubovo on June 29th, 1174. The writer places a curse on the murderers and wishes eternal memory to the prince. The graffito probably dates from 1175–1176 when Andrey’s younger brother Vsevolod Yuryevich ruled in Pereyaslavl. It is the oldest inscription from the North-Eastern Rus’ to have a fairly precise dating. The discovery corroborates the general accuracy of the chronicles in respect to the murder and serves as a source for the study of Old Russian princely titles and other terms of social hierarchy. Andrey Yuryevich is called the grand prince and his murderers are collectively given the pejorative name of parobki (servants) despite the high social status of at least some of them. As the first example of anathematising state criminals in Rus’, the inscription has relevance for church history as well. Valuable new information is provided by the list of assassins. It includes the names of 11–13 individuals. The list indicates that the main conspirator, the boyar Kuchcko's son-in-law named Peter was the son of someone named Frol. That Frol may have been the founder of the Church of Saints Florus and Laurus in the Moscow Kremlin. The patronymic of the third of the murderers Yakim Kuckovičь is spelled with a c., which may be an indication of Kuchko's Novgorodian origin. The fourth on the list is Ofrem Moizich. The authors accept the Arabic origins of Ofrem’s patronymic suggested by V. S. Kuleshov. The latter traces it back to the name Muʕizz which could have belonged to a Muslim from Volga Bulgaria. The fifth conspirator Dobryna Mikitich is tentatively identified as the Rostov boyar Dobryna the Tall. He played a prominent role in the feud triggered by the assassination of Andrey Yuryevich and perished in the Battle of Yuryev Field on June 27th, 1176. The last person on the list bears the rare Slavic name Styrjata which elsewhere is attested only in the 12th century graffiti inscriptions from the Annunciation Church at Gorodische near Novgorod. From the standpoint of linguistics the inscription demonstrates an advanced stage of the yer-shift. In this respect it is similar to the Novgorod birchbark letter No. 724 which dates from the same period. The inscription was read with the help of a three-dimensional model created by the RSSDA Lab. (https://rssda.su/ep-rus).
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Teijeiro, J. M., P. E. Marini, M. J. Bragado, and L. J. Garcia-Marin. "Protein kinase C activity in boar sperm." Andrology 5, no. 2 (February 10, 2017): 381–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/andr.12312.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Andrew bonar"

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Smith, Jeremy. "The Tories and Ireland : Andrew Bonar Law and Conservative strategy towards the third Home Rule bill 1911-1914." Thesis, London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London), 1995. http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1392/.

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Bonar Law was a much more capable and tenacious leader than most previous accounts have suggested. He had inherited a very unfavourable position with the party badly demoralised and frustrated: few members had greeted his selection as leader with enthusiasm, and both Long and Chamberlain were hopeful of replacing him in the near future. Bonar Law's response was to try and regroup the party, and his own position, around a tough campaign to resist Home Rule. A campaign which he hoped would force an election, principally on the issue of whether Ulster should be forced under a Dublin Parliament. This line he pursued with great determination: though he remained sensitive to party tensions and differences, and always concerned with the public perception of party tactics. Yet it was a perilous course to follow; threatening the Government with support for civil war in Ireland if it did not hold an election before implementing the bill: an approach to opposition rarely contemplated by the party both before and since. Though one we are denied seeing the full consequences of with the sudden outbreak of war in Europe and Britain's entry into it on August 4th 1914.
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Books on the topic "Andrew bonar"

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Adams, R. J. Q. Bonar Law. London: John Murray, 1999.

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Adams, R. J. Q. Bonar Law. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 1999.

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Day, Walter. Twin Galaxies' Official Video Game & Pinball Book Of World Records; Second Edition, Arcade Volume. Edited by Walter Day and Mr Kelly R. Flewin. Fairfield, IA: 1st World Publishing, 2007.

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Bonar, Marjory. Andrew Bonar : The Good Pastor (Ambassador Classic Biographies). Ambassador-Emerald International, 1999.

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Series, Michigan Historical Reprint. A commentary on the book of Leviticus, expository & practical, with critical notes. By the Rev. Andrew A. Bonar... Scholarly Publishing Office, University of Michigan Library, 2005.

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1879-1959, McGill Caroline, ed. Draper genealogy: With allied lines : Andrews, Berg, Bonar, Hilton, McClurg, McConnell, McGill, Mustard, Stoothoff, Van Voorhees. Springfield, MO: Betsy Erb, 1998.

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Day, Walter. TWIN GALAXIES' OFFICIAL VIDEO GAME & PINBALLBOOK OF WORLD RECORDS; Arcade Volume, Second Edition. 2nd ed. 1st World Publishing, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Andrew bonar"

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Keynes, John Maynard. "Andrew Bonar Law." In Essays in Biography, 33–36. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-59074-2_4.

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Leonard, Dick. "Andrew Bonar Law." In Modern British Prime Ministers from Balfour to Johnson, 55–63. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003031963-6.

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Leonard, Dick. "Andrew Bonar Law — Tory Puritan." In A Century of Premiers, 94–106. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230511507_7.

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McDonough, Frank. "Leadership: (2) Andrew Bonar Law and Anglo-German Relations." In The Conservative Party and Anglo-German Relations, 1905–1914, 53–68. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230210912_4.

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"Andrew Bonar Law." In Biographical Dictionary of British Prime Ministers, 276–302. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203194553-10.

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"Andrew Bonar Law." In Fifty Key Figures in Twentieth Century British Politics, 166–69. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203465455-40.

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Jackson, Alvin. "Andrew Bonar Law." In Biographical Dictionary of British Prime Ministers, 262–72. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203194553-37.

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Shannon, Richard. "Robert Norman William Blake 1916–2003." In Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 153 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, VII. British Academy, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264348.003.0004.

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Robert Norman William Blake (1916–2003), a Fellow of the British Academy, had published admired revisionist studies of the soldier Lord Haig (1952) and the politician Andrew Bonar Law (1955), but unquestionably it was the brilliant success of his biography of Benjamin Disraeli in 1966 that stimulated support for his election to the Academy. He was born in the Manor House, Brundall, on the Yare, Norfolk, a little outside Norwich, on December 23, 1916 to William Joseph Blake and Norah Lindley. In 1935, Blake went to Magdalen College, Oxford, with a view to preparing for a legal career. He read ‘Modern Greats’, philosophy, politics, and economics. Blake was eloquent on the depressing peculiarities of World War II. He related in a manuscript fragment, ‘Memories of Christ Church’, that his two closest friends in the Senior Common Room were Hugh Trevor-Roper and Charles Stuart. In his biography of Disraeli, Blake made the British prime minister much less convincing as a heroic legend, but made him much more interesting as a man.
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"Andrei Kozyrev: A Bona Fide “Kamikaze”." In Gaidar’s Revolution. I.B. Tauris, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755621040.ch-008.

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