Richard Brown on Three Rebellions
Richard Brown is the author of Three Rebellions: Canada 1837-1838, South Wales 1839 and Victoria, Australia 1854, published in January 2010,
Read MoreWhat did your family do in the revolution?
Historiography is about how history is done. It is the study of the practice of history, or perhaps the history of history.
On Chartist Ancestors, the ‘historiography’ category is primarily made up of interviews with historians working on Chartism, sometimes talking about their own work and sometimes discussing the work of others.
It also covers other ways of ‘doing history’ – including visits to sites associated with Chartism.
Richard Brown is the author of Three Rebellions: Canada 1837-1838, South Wales 1839 and Victoria, Australia 1854, published in January 2010,
Read MoreWhen the historian Malcolm Chase completed his much-admired Chartism: A New History and submitted it to Manchester University Press for
Read MoreKensal Green Cemetery is the resting place of a number of leading Chartists. This page offers a guided walking tour.
Read MoreProfessor Paul Pickering is Director of both the Research School of Humanities and the Arts and the Australian Studies Institute
Read MoreDr Katrina Navickas is the author of Protest and the Politics of Space and Place 1789-1848. She is senior lecturer
Read MoreRobert Gammage was both a prominent Chartist and the first real historian of Chartism. Written in 1854 and published the
Read MoreStephen Roberts is the editor of The Dignity of Chartism, a collection of essays by the eminent Chartist historian Dorothy
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