「chartist」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 60件
the movement, Place ceased to be involved in | Chartist activities. |
ustralia, 14 November 1889) was a stonemason, | Chartist, and Australian trade unionist. |
onist, anti-segregationist, woman suffragist, | chartist and anti-vivisectionist in 19th century Great |
Joshua Hobson (1810-1876) was a British | Chartist and socialist who was the first publisher of |
Many had been ambivalent to the | Chartist cause in the first place, more concerned with |
of slavery during the American Civil War, the | Chartist cause, and arranging for influential Nonconfo |
a conspiracy against the poor in Radical and | Chartist circles was the Reverend Joseph Rayner Stephe |
ochdale and the Oldham delegates to the first | Chartist convention in 1839, were Methodist Unitarians |
It is the best preserved example of a | Chartist cottage built by the National Land Company is |
Rosedene, an example of a | Chartist cottage at Dodford, is owned and maintained b |
er of listed buildings, including a number of | Chartist cottages and the Church of the Holy Trinity a |
Back in England, Revans was involved in | Chartist disturbances, and was introduced by J. A. Roe |
poor workers and their children by means of a | Chartist educational programme put into practice. |
ter of Chartism, though denying he was ever a | Chartist, he was a key figure in the movement, and was |
choolmaster and journalist before he became a | Chartist in 1840, Cooper was a passionate, determined |
adical journalist John Towers, and the former | Chartist lawyer W. P. Roberts, withdrew from Macdonald |
of Waterloo, Hugh Williams, the 19th century | Chartist lawyer who played a prominent role in the Reb |
ones was the son of Ernest Jones, a prominent | Chartist leader who was also a Barrister (he adopted a |
nclude the Holberry Cascades, named for local | Chartist leader Samuel Holberry, the Bochum Bell, dona |
er to hold, Nottingham's second seat, held by | Chartist leader Feargus O'Connor. |
The books were published by the | Chartist leader Feargus O'Connor in the Northern Star. |
It was here that the | Chartist leader Henry Vincent was imprisoned. |
James Bronterre O'Brien, | Chartist leader, reformer and journalist (d.1864). |
Henry Vincent is arrested after addressing a | Chartist meeting and taken to prison at Monmouth. |
Chartist meeting, Kennington Common, 1848 | |
making up for lost time and promulgating the | Chartist message throughout the country. |
ntgomeryshire, Wales and became active in the | Chartist movement before migrating to Victoria, Austra |
illiams and William Jones, all members of the | Chartist movement in South Wales in the 1830s prior to |
The strike was influenced by the | Chartist movement - a mass working class movement from |
t son of Henry Binns (a leading member of the | Chartist Movement) and Elizabeth Bowron. |
In the 1830s, at the height of the | Chartist movement, there was a general tendency toward |
l Sheffield women who were also active in the | Chartist movement, led by Anne Kent and Anne Knight. |
f office there was a surge of support for the | Chartist Movement, with the first mass meeting held in |
Shepherd's epic drama about the | Chartist movement, Holding Fire! was commissioned by t |
Salme Dutt's treatment of the | Chartist movement, When England Arose, was published i |
ion of women's suffrage to the demands of the | Chartist movement. |
October - John Frost joins the | Chartist movement. |
as the home of William Lovett a leader of the | Chartist movement. |
ver, Lovett is best known for his role in the | Chartist movement. |
as subsequently convicted for his part in the | Chartist Newport Rising at Newport, Monmouthshire in 1 |
He was prosecuted for his part in the | Chartist Newport Rising at Newport, Monmouthshire in 1 |
niah Williams, prosecuted for his part in the | Chartist Newport Rising in 1839, was born in the villa |
In 1838-1844 he was the publisher of the | Chartist newspaper Northern Star. |
largest membership of any early metropolitan | Chartist organisation (a little over 3,000 members).Pr |
After the second | Chartist Petition was presented to Parliament in April |
When the | Chartist petition was rejected, the ensuing disturbanc |
However, with the defeat of the first | Chartist petition, the local movement was split betwee |
iment of Foot in the Westgate Hotel where the | Chartist prisoners were held. |
out The Chartists, his most recent being "The | Chartist Prisoners". |
f Freedom, and Working Man's Vindicator was a | Chartist publication noted for its rigorous and untiri |
ayed a leading role in the suppression of the | Chartist riots of 1839. |
Rumours of a possible | Chartist rising and previous violence elsewhere, follo |
a cottage built as part of the Great Dodford | Chartist settlement. |
Leicester, under his leadership, became a | Chartist stronghold--with its own journals, e.g. |
ed out to support the civil powers during the | Chartist unrests. |
involved to a greater or lesser extent in the | Chartist uprising and had to leave the area rather hur |
death for treason, for his involvement in the | Chartist uprising. |
The | Chartist voting machine, attributed to Benjamin Jolly |
Jones (1809-1873) was a political Radical and | Chartist, who was a former actor, working as a watchma |
1 F. R. Lees, a Temperance | Chartist, won no votes in the Ripon by-election, 1860, |
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