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24 March 2020

HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / Stuart Era (1603-1714), Social and cultural history, HISTORY / Social History, European history
'Both the introduction outlining a new direction for communication research and the essays
are successful in opening up new research relating to political communication.'
Journal of British Studies
Chris R. Kyle is Associate Professor of History at Syracuse University
Jason Peacey is Professor of Early Modern British History at University College London
1 Introduction – Chris R. Kyle and Jason Peacey
2 ‘A dog, a butcher, and a puritan’: the politics of lent in early modern England – Chris R. Kyle
3 The Lord Admiral, the Parliament-men and the Narrow Seas, 1625–7 – Thomas Cogswell
4 Space, place and Laudianism in early Stuart Ipswich – Noah Millstone
5 ‘Written according to my usual way’: political communication and the rise of the agent in seventeenth-century England – Jason Peacey
6 Diligent enquiries and perfect accounts: central initiatives and local agency in the English civil war – Ann Hughes
7 Provincial ‘Levellers’ and the coming of the regicide in the Southwest – David R. Como
8 Sovereignty by the book: corporations, plantations and literate order – Dan Beaver
9 Local expertise in hostile territory: state building in the peripheries – Jennifer Wells
10 News and the personal letter, or the news education of Theophilus Hastings, 7th Earl of Huntingdon, 1660–71 – Lindsay O’Neill
11 The news out of Newgate after the 1715 Jacobite rebellion – Rachel Weil
Index