The Gladstone and Disraeli era

         Study Centre resources for Gladstone and Disraeli
         All articles are in printable pdf in the Study Centre
               Note the volume and issue number then access them in the Study Centre
            at  e-new perspective - the journal online
[13 primary articles, 26 in total, October 2011]

 

 

Gladstone 
by Dr E.J. Feuchtwanger. Vol. 2. No. 1

Gladstone and Religion 
by Rodney Woods. Vol. 3. No. 2

Disraeli: Charlatan or Statesman? 
by Dr E.J. Feuchtwanger Vol. 5 No. 1

Popular Conservatism in Britain, 1867-1914
by Dr Rohan McWilliam. Vol 6, No 1

Destructive Contradictions within British Liberalism
by Alan Sykes. Vol 6, No 2

Gladstone and the Historians
by Dr Rohan McWilliam. Vol 8, No 3

Disraeli’s Foreign Policy
by Dr Ian St John. Vol 9, No 2

W.E. Gladstone and the Liberal Crusade
by Dr Terry Jenkins. Vol 10, No 2

Disraeli, Gladstone and Parliamentary Reform
by Dr Graham Goodlad. Vol 10, No 3

Disraeli as Opposition Leader
by Dr Ian St John. Vol 11, No 2

Gladstone’s Foreign Policy
by Dr Michael Partridge. Vol 11, No 3

Disraeli and Tory Democracy
by Dr Edgar Feuchtwanger. Vol 14, No 1

Gladstone versus Disraeli: The Budget of December 1852
by Dr Ian St John. Vol 15, No 2


Consider also

The Conservative Party in the Nineteenth Century, 1832-1914 
by Dr David Dutton. Vol. 1 No. 2

Lord Salisbury and Late Nineteenth-Century Conservatism 
by Dr David Dutton. Vol. 4. No. 1

How Religious was Victorian Britain?
by Professor Hugh McLeod. Vol 6, No 1

How ‘democratic’ was late-Victorian and Edwardian Britain?
by Dr Geoffrey Stewart. Vol 6, No 3

Continuity and change in British History, 1846-1916
by Professor Martin Pugh. Vol 6, No 3

Understanding Mid-Victorian Society: 1840s to 1880s 
by Professor K. Theodore Hoppen. Vol 7, No 1

British Foreign Policy, 1874-1914 
by Professor John Charmley. Vol 7, No 3

Turning Points and Continuities in British Political History, 1830-1900
by Professor William Rubinstein. Vol 8, No 2

The Strange Death of Irish Home Rule
by Nick Pelling. Vol 8, No 3

What was ‘new’ about New Liberalism?
by Dr Robert Self. Vol 9, No 3

The ‘People’s Minister’: Lord Palmerston and Mid-Victorian Politics
by Dr David Brown. Vol 11, No 1

The Social Roots of Political Change in Later Nineteenth-Century Britain
by Professor Martin Pugh. Vol 12, No 1

Why was there a Conservative Ascendancy in Late-Victorian Britain?
by Professor Michael Bentley. Vol 13, No 1

ALSO … Study skills series
 

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