Transactions of the Royal Historical Society
FIFTH SERIES
Volume I (1951)
Quinn, D.B., ‘Some Spanish Reactions to Elizabethan Colonial Enterprises’, pp. 1-24
Wallace-Hadrill, J.M., ‘The Work of Gregory of Tours in the Light of Modern Research’,pp. 25-46
Gash, N., ‘Peel and the Party System’, pp. 47-70
Dickinson, Rev. J.C., ‘English Regular Canons and the Continent in the TwelfthCentury’, pp. 71-90
Milne, Doreen J., ‘The Results of the Rye House Plot and their Influence upon theRevolution of 1688 (Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 91-108
Kitson Clark, G.S.R., ‘The Electorate and the Repeal of the Corn laws’, pp. 109-126
Pares, R., ‘George III and the Politicians’, pp. 127-152
Plucknett, T.F.T., ‘Presidential Address: The Impeachments of 1376’, pp. 153-164
Volume II (1952)
Fisher, D.J.V., ‘The Church in England between the Death of Bede and the DanishInvasions’, pp. 1-20
Rubinstein, N., ‘Florence and the Despots. Some Aspects of Florentine Diplomacy in theFourteenth Century’, pp. 21-46
Eyck, E., ‘The Generals and the Downfall of the German Monarchy, 1917-1918’, pp. 47-68
Templeman, G., ‘Edward III and the Beginnings of the Hundred Years War’, pp. 69-88
Davies, K.G., ‘The Origins of the Commission System in the West India Trade’, pp. 89-108
Miller, Edward, ‘The State and Landed Interests in Thirteenth Century France andEngland’, pp. 109-130
Ramsay, G.D., ‘The Smugglers’ Trade: A Neglected Aspect of English CommercialDevelopment’, pp. 131-158
Plucknett, T.F.T., ‘Presidential Address: State Trials under Richard II’, pp. 159-172
Volume III (1953)
Johnston, S.H.F., ‘The Scots Army in the Reign of Anne’, pp. 1-22
Taylor, A.J., ‘Combination in the Mid-Nineteenth Century Coal Industry’, pp. 23-40
Lehmann, Paul, ‘Autobiographies of the Middle Ages’, pp. 41-52
Moody, T.W., ‘Michael Davitt and the British Labour Movement, 1882-1906’, pp. 53-76
Barrow, G.W.S., ‘Scottish Rulers and the Religious Orders, 1070-1153 (Alexander PrizeEssay)’, pp. 77-100
Finberg, H.P.R., ‘Sherborne, Glastonbury, and the Expansion of Wessex’, pp. 101-124
Salter, F.R., ‘Political Nonconformity in the Eighteen-thirties’, pp. 125-144
Plucknett, T.F.T., ‘Presidential Address: Impeachment and Attainder’, pp. 145-160
Volume IV (1954)
Verlinden, Charles, ‘Frankish Colonization: a New Approach’, pp. 1-18
Prestwich, J.O., ‘War and Finance in the Anglo-Norman State’, pp. 19-44
Minchinton, W.E., ‘Bristol – Metropolis of the West in the Eighteenth Century(Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 69-90
Hay, Denys, ‘The Divisions of Spoils of War in Fourteenth-Century England’, pp. 91-110
Thomson, M.A., ‘Louis XIV and the Origins of the War of the Spanish Succession’, pp.111-134
Hale Bellot, H., ‘Presidential Address: Thomas Jefferson in American Historiography’,pp. 135-156
Volume V (1955)
Pugh, R.B., ‘The King’s Prisons before 1250’, pp. 1-22
Davis, R.H.C., ‘East Anglia and the Danelaw’, pp. 23-40
Hanna, A.J., ‘The Role of the London Missionary Society in the Opening Up of EastCentral Africa’, pp. 41-60
Frend, W.H.C., ‘North Africa and Europe in the Early Middle Ages’, pp. 61-80
Boyle, Rev. L.E., ‘The Oculus Sacerdotis and Some Other Works of William of Pagula(Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 81-110
Whiteman, Anne, ‘The Re-establishment of the Church of England, 1660-1663’, pp. 111-132
MacDonagh, Oliver, ‘Emigration and the State, 1833-55: an Essay in AdministrativeHistory’, pp. 133-160
Hale Bellot, H., ‘Presidential Address: Council and Cabinet in the Mainland Colonies’,pp. 161-176
Volume VI (1956)
Hoskins, W.G., ‘English provincial Towns in the Early Sixteenth Century’, pp. 1-20
Offler, H.S., ‘Empire and papacy: the Last Struggle’, pp. 21-48
Routledge, F.J., ‘Charles II and the Cardinal de Retz’, pp. 49-68
Elton, G.R., ‘The Political Creed of Thomas Cromwell’, pp. 69-92
Rudé, F.E., ‘The Gordon Riots: a Study of the Rioters and their Victims (Alexander PrizeEssay)’, pp. 93-114
Highfield, J.R.L., ‘The English Hierarchy in the Reign of Edward III’, pp. 115-138
Hyde, F. E., ‘The Expansion of Liverpool’s Carrying Trade with the Far East andAustralia, 1860-1914’, pp. 139-160
Hale Bellot, H., ‘Presidential Address: The Leighs in South Carolina’, pp. 161-188
Volume VII (1957)
Dodwell, B., ‘The Foundation of Norwich Cathedral’, pp. 1-18
Roberts, M., ‘The Political Objectives of Gustavus Adolphus in Germany, 1630-1632’,pp. 19-46
Rich, E.E., ‘The First Earl of Shaftesbury’s Colonial Policy’, pp. 47-70
Bolsover, G.H., ‘Ivan the Terrible in Russian Historiography’, pp. 71-90
McFarlane, K.B., ‘The Investment of Sir John Fastolf’s Profits of War’, pp. 91-116
Stones, E.L.G., ‘The Folvilles of Ashby-Folville, Leicestershire and their Associates inCrime’, pp. 117-136
Plumb, J.H., ‘The Organization of the Cabinet in the Reign of Queen Anne’, pp. 137-158
Hale Bellot, H., ‘Presidential Address: The Literature of the Last Half-Century on theConstitutional History of the United States’, pp. 159-182
Volume VIII (1958)
Otway-Ruthven, A.J., ‘The Constitutional Position of the Great Lordships of SouthWales’, pp. 1-20
Chaloner, W.H., ‘Dr. Joseph Priestley, John Wilkinson and the French Revolution, 1789-1802’, pp. 21-40
Pelling, Henry, ‘The Early History of the Communist Party of Great Britain’, pp. 41-58
Aston, T.H., ‘The Origins of the Manor in England’, pp. 59-84
Hunnisett, R.F., ‘The Origins of the Office of Coroner (Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 85-104
Best, G.F.A., ‘The Protestant Constitution and its Supporters, 1800-1829’, pp. 105-128
Davies, Alun, ‘The New Agriculture in Lower Normandy, 1750-1789’, pp. 129-146
Knowles, Rev. M.D., ‘Presidential Address: Great Historical Enterprises. I. TheBollandists’, pp. 147-166
Volume IX (1959)
Fryde, E.B., ‘The English Farmers of the Customs, 1343-51’, pp. 1-18
Horn, D.B., ‘Rank and Emolument in the British Diplomatic Service, 1689-1789’, pp. 19-50
Edwards, Kathleen, ‘The Social origins and Provenance of the English Bishops duringthe Reign of Edward II’, pp. 51-80
Wilson, Charles, ‘The Other face of Mercantilism’, pp. 81-102
Barnes, Thomas G., ‘County Politics and a Puritan Cause Célèbre: Somerset Churchales,1633 (Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 103-122
Grierson, Philip, ‘Commerce in the Dark Ages: A Critique of the Evidence’, pp. 123-140
Knowles, Rev. M.D., ‘Presidential Address: Great Historical Enterprises. II. TheMaurists’, pp. 141-168
Volume X (1960)
Koenigsberger, H.G., ‘Decadence or Shift? Changes in the Civilization of Italy andEurope in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries’, pp. 1-18
Le Patourel, John, ‘The Treaty of Brétigny, 1360’, pp. 19-40
Youings, Joyce A., ‘The Council of the West’, pp. 41-60
Leyser, K., ‘England and the Empire in the Early Twelfth Century’, pp. 61-84
Harding, Alan, ‘The Origins and Early History of the Keeper of the Peace (AlexanderPrize Essay)’, pp. 85-110
Gwynn, Rev. Aubrey, ‘Edward I and the Proposed Purchase of English Law for the Irish,c. 1276-80’, pp. 111-128
Knowles, rev. M.D., ‘Presidential Address: Great Historical Enterprises. III. TheMonumenta Germaniae Historica’, pp. 129-150
Volume XI (1961)
Grenville, J.A.S., ‘Diplomacy and War Plans in the United States, 1890-1017’, pp. 1-23
Lynch, J., ‘Philip II and the Papacy’, pp. 24-42
Renouard, Yves, ‘Les Cahorsins, homes d’affaires Français du XIIIe siècle’, pp. 43-68
Hinsley, F.H., ‘The Development of the European States System since the EighteenthCentury’, pp. 69-80
Williams, Gwyn A., ‘London and Edward I’, pp. 81-100
Ehrman, John, ‘Lloyd George and Churchill as War Ministers’, pp. 101-116
Holdsworth, C.J., ‘John of Ford and English Cistercian Writing, 1167-1214’, pp. 117-136
Knowles, Rev. M.D., ‘Presidential Address: Great Historical Enterprises. IV. The RollsSeries’, pp. 137-160
Volume XII (1962)
Jacob, E.F., ‘Archbishop John Stafford’, pp. 1-24
Stone, E., ‘Profit-and-loss Accountancy at Norwich Cathedral Priory’, pp. 25-48
Reddaway, T.F., ‘The London Goldsmiths circa 1500’, pp. 49-62
Stoye, J.W., ‘Emperor Charles VI: The Early Years of the Reign’, pp. 63-84
Keen, M.H., ‘Treason Trials under the Law of Arms (Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 85-104
Scammell, G.V., ‘Shipowning in England circa 1450-1550’, pp. 105-122
Ryan, A.N., ‘Trade with the Enemy in the Scandinavian and Baltic Ports during theNapoleonic War: for and against’, pp. 123-140
Edwards, Sir Goronwy, ‘Presidential Address: The Historical Study of the WelshLawbooks’, pp. 141-156
Volume XIII (1963)
Mason, J.F.A., ‘Roger de Montgomery and his Sons (1067-1102)’, pp. 1-28
Cumpston, I.M., ‘The Discussion of Imperial Problems in the British parliament, 1880-85’, pp. 29-48
Dickens, A.G., ‘The Writers of Tudor Yorkshire’, pp. 49-76
Hill, J.E.C., ‘Puritans and the ‘Dark Corners of the Land’’, pp. 77-102
Monger, G.W., ‘The End of Isolation: Britain, Germany and Japan, 1900-1902(Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 103-122
Martin, G.H., ‘The English Borough in the Thirteenth Century’, pp. 123-144
Mattingly, Garrett, ‘No Peace beyond what Line?’, pp. 145-162
Edwards, Sir Goronwy, ‘Presidential Address: The Royal Household and the WelshLawbooks’, pp. 163-176
Volume XIV (1964)
McKendrick, Neil, ‘Josiah Wedgwood and Thomas Bentley: an Inventor-EntrepreneurPartnership in the Industrial Revolution’, pp. 1-34
Kirby, J.L., ‘Councils and Councillors of Henry IV, 1399-1413’, pp. 35-66
Holt, J.C., ‘The St Albans Chroniclers and Magna Carta’, pp. 67-88
Litt, W. Ullmann, ‘Reflections on the Medieval Empire’, pp. 89-108
Moore, J.S., ‘The Domesday Teamland: a Reconsideration (Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp.109-130
Mather, F.C., ‘The Duke of Bridgwater’s Trustees and the Coming of the Railways’, pp.131-154
Porter, H.C., ‘The Nose of Wax: Scripture and the Spirit from Erasmus to Milton’, pp.155-174
Edwards, Sir Goronwy, ‘Presidential Address: The Emergence of Majority Rule inEnglish Parliamentary Elections’, pp. 175-196
Volume XV (1965)
Lewis, P.S., ‘War Propaganda and Historiography in Fifteenth-Century France andEngland’, pp. 1-22
Thompson, F.M.L., ‘Land and Politics in England in the Nineteenth Century’, pp. 23-44
Aylmer, G.E., ‘Place Bills and the Separation of Powers: Some Seventeenth-CenturyOrigins of ‘Non-Political’ Civil Service’, pp. 45-70
Jones, P.J., ‘Communes and Despots: The City State in Late-Medieval Italy’, pp. 71-96
Kelly, Michael, ‘The Submission of the Clergy (The Alexander Prize)’, pp. 97-120
Bell, K., ‘British Policy towards the Construction of the Suez Canal’, pp. 121-144
Sawyer, P.H., ‘The Wealth of England in the Eleventh Century’, pp. 145-164
Edwards, Sir Goronwy, ‘Presidential Address: The Emergence of Majority Rule in theProcedure of the House of Commons’, pp. 165-188
Volume XVI (1966)
Duggan, Charles, ‘Richard of Ilchester, Royal Servant and Bishop’, pp. 1-22
Harvey, Barbara F., ‘The Population Trend in England between 1300 and 1348’, pp. 23-42
Prest, J.M., ‘Gladstone and Russell’, pp. 43-64
Donaldson, G., ‘Scotland’s Conservative North in the Sixteenth and SeventeenthCenturies’, pp. 65-80
Palmer, J.J.N., ‘The Anglo-French Peace Negotiations, 1390-1396 (The AlexanderPrize)’, pp. 81-94
Burns, J.H., ‘Bentham and the French Revolution’, pp. 95-114
Webster, Bruce, ‘David II and the Government of Fourteenth-Century Scotland’, pp. 115-130
Humphreys, R.A., ‘Presidential Address: Anglo-American Rivalries and SpanishAmerican Emancipation’, pp. 131-156
Volume XVII (1967)
Cullen, L.M., ‘Problems in the Interpretation and revision of Eighteenth-Century IrishEconomic History’, pp. 1-22
Brooke, C.N.L., ‘St. Dominic and his first biographer’, pp. 23-40
Elliott, J.H., ‘The Mental World of Hernán Cortés’, pp. 41-58
Clanchy, M.T., ‘The Franchise of Return of Writs’, pp. 59-82
Hurstfield, Joel, ‘Was there a Tudor Despotism after all?’, pp. 83-108
Allen Brown, R., ‘The Norman Conquest’, pp. 109-130
Humphreys, R.A., ‘Presidential Address: Anglo-American Rivalries and the VenezuelaCrisis of 1895’, pp. 131-164
Volume XVIII (1968)
Cromwell, Valerie, ‘The Losing of the Initiative by the House of Commons, 1780-1914’,pp. 1-24
Cowdrey, Rev. H.E.J., ‘The Papacy, The Patarenes and the Church of Milan’, pp. 25-48
Lewis, Bernard, ‘The Mongols, the Turks and the Muslim Polity’, pp. 49-68
Pearl Valerie, ‘The ‘Royal Independents’ in the English Civil War’, pp. 69-96
Lovatt, Roger, ‘The Imitation of Christ in late Medieval England (The Alexander Prize)’,pp. 97-122
Perkin, H.J., ‘The Social Causes of the British Industrial Revolution’, pp. 123-144
Ives, E.W., ‘The Common Lawyers in Pre-reformation England’, pp. 145-173
Humphreys, R.A., ‘Presidential Address: Anglo-American Rivalries in Central America’,pp. 174-208
Volume XIX (1969)
Smail, R.C., ‘Latin Syria and the West, 1149-1187’, pp. 1-20
Hanham, H.J., ‘The Problem of Highland Discontent, 1880-1885’, pp. 21-66
Boxer, C.R., ‘Some Second Thoughts on the Third Anglo-Dutch War, 1672-1674’, pp.67-94
Brown, A.L., ‘The King’s Councillors in Fifteenth-Century England’, pp. 95-118
Vale, M.G.A., ‘The Last Years of English Gascony, 1451-1453 (The Alexander Prize)’,pp. 119-138
Knowles, Rev. M.D., ‘Some Trends in Scholarship, 1868-1968, in the field of medievalHistory’, pp. 139-158
Butterfield, Sir Herbert, ‘Some Trends in Scholarship, 1868-1968, in the field of ModernHistory’, pp. 159-184
Volume XX (1970)
McCord, N., ‘The Government of Tyneside, 1800-50’, pp. 5-30
Hendy, M.F., ‘Byzantium, 1081-1204: An Economic Reappraisal’, pp. 31-52
Beckett, J.C., ‘The Irish Viceroyalty in the Restoration Period’, pp. 53-72
Cooper, J.P., ‘Economic Regulation and the Cloth Industry in seventeenth-centuryEngland’, pp. 73-100
Crawley, C.W., ‘The Prothero Lecture: Sir George Prothero and his circle’, pp. 101-128
Harriss, G.L., ‘Cardinal Beaufort – Patriot or Usurer?’, pp. 129-148
Williams, Glyndawr, ‘The Hudson’s Bay Company and its critics in the eighteenthcentury’, pp. 149-172
Southern, R.W., ‘Presidential Address: Aspects of the European Classical Tradition ofHistorical Writing. I. The Classical Tradition from Einhard to Geoffrey of Monmouth’,pp. 173-196
Volume XXI (1971)
Watt, D.E.R., ‘The Minority of Alexander III of Scotland’, pp. 1-24
Steinberg, J., ‘The Novelle of 1908: Necessities and Choices in the Anglo-German NavalArms race’, pp. 25-44
Grierson, P., ‘The Monetary Pattern of Sixteenth-Century Coinage (The ProtheroLecture)’, pp. 45-60
Bowker, Margaret, ‘The Commons Supplication against the Ordinaries in the light ofsome Archidiaconal Acta (The Alexander Prize)’, pp. 61-78
Mazlish, Bruce, ‘What is Psycho-History?’, pp. 79-100
Wilson, B.R., ‘Sociological Methods in the Study of History’, pp. 101-118
Schofield, R.S., ‘Historical Demography: Some Possibilities and Some Limitations’, pp.119-132
Hart, Cyril, ‘The Tribal Hidage’, pp. 133-158
Southern, R.W., ‘Presidential Address: Aspects of the European Tradition of HistoricalWriting: 2. Hugh of St Victor and the Idea of Historical Development’, pp. 159-180
Volume XXII (1972)
Obolensky, Dimitri, ‘Nationalism in Eastern Europe in the Middle Ages’, pp. 1-16
Speck, W.A., ‘Political Propaganda in Augustan England’, pp. 17-32
Roberts, P.R., ‘The Career of a Political Bishop: Adam de Orleton (c. 1279-1345)’, pp.33-48
Thompson, Christopher, ‘The Union with England and the Identity of ‘Anglican’ Wales(The Alexander Prize)’, pp. 49-70
Kitzinger, Ernst, ‘The Gregorian Reform and the Visual Arts: A Problem of Method (TheProthero Lecture)’, pp. 87-102
Waterhouse, Ellis, ‘Some Painters and the Counter-Reformation before 1600’, pp. 103-118
Bowness, Alan, ‘Art and Society in England and France in the Mid-Nineteenth Century:Two Paintings before the Public’, pp. 119-140
Johnson, D.W.J., ‘Britain and France in 1940’, pp. 141-158
Southern, R.W., ‘Presidential Address: Aspects of the European Tradition of HistoricalWriting: 3. History as Prophecy’, pp. 159-180
Volume XXIII (1973)
Morgan, D.A.L., ‘The King’s Affinity in the Polity of Yorkist England’, pp. 1-26
Roberts, J.M., ‘The French Origins of the ‘Right’’, pp. 27-54
Outhwaite, R.B., ‘Age at Marriage in England from the late seventeenth to the nineteenthcentury’, pp. 55-70
D’Alton, Ian, ‘Southern Irish Unionism: A Study of Cork Unionists, 1884-1914 (TheAlexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 71-88
O’Day, Rosemary, ‘The Ecclesiastical Patronage of the Lord Keeper, 1558-1642(proxime accessit for the Alexander Prize)’, pp. 89-110
Holmes, George, ‘The Emergence of an Urban Ideology at Florence, c, 1250-1450’, pp.111-134
Burke, Peter, ‘Patrician Culture: Venice and Amsterdam in the Seventeenth Century’, pp.135-152
Kent, J.H.S., ‘The Role of Religion in the Cultural Structure of the later Victorian City’,pp. 153-174
Lampard, Eric E., ‘The Pursuit of Happiness in the City: Changing Opportunities andOptions in America (The Prothero Lecture)’, pp. 175-220
Pole, J.R., ‘The New History and the Sense of Social Purpose in American HistoricalWriting’, pp. 221-242
Southern, R.W., ‘Presidential Address: Aspects of the European Tradition of HistoricalWriting: 4. The Sense of the Past’, pp. 243-264
Volume XXIV (1974)
Gray, J.W., ‘The Problem of Papal Power in the Ecclesiology of St. Bernard’, pp. 1-18
Webster, Charles, ‘New Light on the Invisible College: The Social Relations of EnglishScience in the Mid-Seventeenth Century’, pp. 19-42
Lowe, Peter, ‘Great Britain and the Coming of the Pacific War, 1939-1941’, pp. 43-62
Kitching, C.J., ‘The Quest for Concealed lands in the Reign of Elizabeth I (TheAlexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 63-78
Beer, Samuel H., ‘Tow Models of Public Opinion: Bacon’s ‘New Logic’ and Diotima’s‘Tale of Love’ (The Prothero Lecture)’, pp. 79-96
Bullough, D.A., ‘Games People Played: Drama and Ritual as Propaganda in MedievalEurope’, pp. 97-122
Lyons, F.S.L., ‘‘Parnellism and Crime’, 1887-90’, pp. 123-140
Loades, D.M., ‘The Theory and Practice of Censorship in Sixteenth-Century England’,pp. 141-158
Clarke, P.F., ‘The Progressive Movement in England’, p. 159-182
Elton, G.R., ‘Presidential Address: Tudor Government: The Points of Contact: I.Parliament’, pp. 183-200
Volume XXV (1975)
Walsh, J.D., ‘Elie Halévy and the Birth of Methodism’, pp. 1-20
Bossy, John, ‘The Social History of Confession in the Age of the Reformation’, pp. 21-38
Campbell, James, ‘Observations on English Government from the tenth to the twelfthcentury’, pp. 39-54
Tomlinson, H.C., ‘Place and Profit: an Examination of the Ordnance Office, 1660-1714(The Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 55-76
Hay, D., ‘England, Scotland and Europe: the Problem of the Frontier’, pp. 77-92
Mathias, Peter, ‘Skills and the Diffusion of Innovations from Britain in the eighteenthcentury’, pp. 93-114
Fenlon, D.B., ‘England and Europe: Utopia and its aftermath’, pp. 115-136
Kennedy, P.M., ‘Idealists and Realists: British Views of Germany, 1864-1939’, pp. 137-156
Wallace-Hadrill, J.M., ‘War and Peace in the earlier Middle Ages (The ProtheroLecture)’, pp. 157-174
Harvey, Sally P.J., ‘Domesday Book and Anglo-Norman Governance’, pp. 175-194
Elton, G.R., ‘Presidential Address: Tudor Government: The Points of Contact: II. TheCouncil’, pp. 195-212
Volume XXVI (1976)
Hampson, N., ‘Francois Chabot and his Plot’, pp. 1-14
Pullan, Brian, ‘Catholics and the Poor in Early Modern Europe’, pp. 15-34
Brown, Judith M., ‘Imperial Façade: Some Constraints upon and Contradictions in theBritish Position in India, 1919-35’, pp. 35-52
Parker, Geoffrey, ‘Why Did the Dutch Revolt Last Eighty Years?’, pp. 53-72
Quinn, D.B., ‘Renaissance Influences in English Colonization (The Prothero Lecture)’,pp. 73-94
Wilson, David M., ‘Scandinavian Settlement in the North and West of the British Isles –an Archaeological Point of View’, pp. 95-114
Ranger, T.O., ‘From Humanism to the Science of Man: Colonialism in Africa and theUnderstanding of Alien Societies’, pp. 115-142
Andrew, C.M., ‘The French Colonialist Movement during the Third Republic: theUnofficial Mind of Imperialism’, pp. 143-166
Finley, M.I., ‘Colonies – an Attempt at a Typology’, pp. 167-188
Dickinson, H.T., ‘The Eighteenth Century Debate on the Sovereignty of Parliament’, pp.189-210
Elton, G.R., ‘Presidential Address: Tudor Government: The Points of Contact: III. TheCourt’, pp. 211-228
Volume XXVII (1977)
Dobson, R.B., ‘Urban Decline in late Medieval England’, pp. 1-22
Brown, Lucy, ‘The Treatment of the News in mid-Victorian Newspapers’, pp. 23-40
Holmes, G.S., ‘Gregory King and the Social Structure of pre-Industrial England’, pp. 41-68
Bradshaw, B., ‘Cromwellian Reform and the origins of the Kildare Rebellion, 1533-34(The Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 69-94
Wormald, C.P., ‘The Uses of Literacy in Anglo-Saxon England and its Neighbours’, pp.95-114
McConica, J.K., ‘The Social Relations of Tudor Oxford’, pp. 115-134
Sutherland, Gillian, ‘The Magic of Measurement: mental Testing and English Education1900-40’, pp. 135-154
Nipperdey, Thomas, ‘Mass Education and Modernization: the Case of Germany 1780-1850 (The Prothero Lecture)’, pp. 155-172
John, Eric, ‘War and Society in the Tenth Century: the Maldon Campaign’, pp. 173-196
Elton, G.R., ‘Presidential Address: The Historian’s Social Function’, pp. 197-212
Volume XXVIII (1978)
Lucas, Colin, ‘The problem of the Midi in the French Revolution’, pp. 1-26
Maddicott, J.R., ‘The County Community and the Making of Public Opinion inFourteenth-Century England’, pp. 27-44
Warner, Geoffrey, ‘Allies, Government and Resistance: the Belgian Political Crisis ofNovember 1944’, pp. 45-60
Dilks, David, ‘The Twilight War and the Fall of France: Chamberlain and Churchill in1940’, pp. 61-86
Riley-Smith, J.S.C., ‘Peace never established: the Case of the Kingdom of Jerusalem’,pp. 87-102
Barrow, G.W.S., ‘The Aftermath of War: Scotland and England in the late Thirteenth andearly Fourteenth Centuries (The Prothero Lecture)’, pp. 103-126
Roy, I., ‘England turned Germany? The Aftermath of the Civil War in its EuropeanContact’, pp. 127-144
Gash, N., ‘After Waterloo: British Society and the Legacy of the Napoleonic Wars’, pp.145-158
Watt, D.C., ‘Every War must end: War-time Planning for post-war Security, in Britainand America in the Wars of 1914-18 and 1939-45. The Roles of Historical Example andof Professional Historians’, pp. 159-174
McKibbin, R.I., ‘Social Class and Social Observation in Edwardian England’, pp. 175-200
Habakkuk, Sir John, ‘Presidential Address: The Land Settlement and the Restoration ofCharles II’, pp. 201-222
Volume XXVIX (1979)
Brooks, N.P., ‘England in the Ninth Century: the Crucible of Defeat’, pp. 1-20
Hufton, Olwen, ‘The Seigneur and the Rural Community in Eighteenth-Century France.The Seigneurial reaction: a Reappraisal’, pp. 21-40
Davies, R.R., ‘Kings, Lords and Liberties in the March of Wales, 1066-1272’, pp. 41-62
Ford, C.J., ‘Piracy or Policy: the Crisis in the Channel, 1400-1403 (The Alexander PrizeEssay)’, pp. 63-78
Everitt, Alan, ‘Country, County and Town: Patterns of Regional Evolution in England’,pp. 79-108
Hyde, J.K., ‘Some Uses of Literacy in Venice and Florence in the Thirteenth andFourteenth Centuries’, pp. 109-128
Morgan, Victor, ‘The Cartographic Image of ‘The Country’ in Early Modern England’,pp. 129-154
Kossmann, E.H., ‘The Dutch Case: a National or a Regional Culture? (The ProtheroLecture)’, pp. 155-168
Fryer, W.R., ‘The Republic and the Iron Chancellor: the Pattern of Franco-GermanRelations, 1871-1890’, pp. 169-186
Habakkuk, Sir John, ‘Presidential Address: The Rise and Fall of English LandedFamilies, 1600-1800’, pp. 187-208
Volume XXX (1980)
Slack, Paul, ‘Books of Orders: the Making of English Social Policy, 1577-1631’, pp. 1-22
Addison, Paul, ‘The Political beliefs of Winston Churchill’, pp. 23-48
Moore, R.I., ‘Family, Community and Cult on the Eve of the Gregorian Reform’, pp. 49-70
Dewey, P.E., ‘Food Production and Policy in the United Kingdom, 1914-1918 (TheAlexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 71-90
Aylmer, G.E., ‘From Office-Holding to Civil Service: the Genesis of ModernBureaucracy (The Prothero Lecture)’, pp. 91-108
Griffiths, R.A., ‘Public and Private Bureaucracies in England and Wales in the FifteenthCentury’, pp. 109-130
Stokes, E.T., ‘Bureaucracy and Ideology: Britain and India in the Nineteenth Century’,pp. 131-156
Mommsen, Wolfgang J., ‘’Toward the Iron Cage of Future Serfdom’? On theMethodological Status of Max Weber’s Ideal-Typical Concept of Bureaucratization’, pp.157-182
Lee, J.M., ‘The British Civil Service and the War Economy. Bureaucratic Conceptions ofthe ‘Lessons of History’ in 1918 and 1945’, pp. 183-198
Habakkuk, Sir John, ‘Presidential Address: The Rise and Fall of English LandedFamilies, 1600-1800: II’, pp. 199-221
Volume XXXI (1981)
Colley, Linda, ‘Eighteenth-Century English Radicalism before Wilkes’, pp. 1-20
Markus, R.A., ‘Gregory the Great’s Europe’, pp. 21-36
Vincent, J.R., ‘The Parliamentary Dimension of the Crimean War’, pp. 37-50
Hughes, Ann, ‘Militancy and Localism: Warwickshire Politics and Westminster politics(The Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 51-68
Underdown, David, ‘The Problem of Popular Allegiance in the English Civil War (TheProthero Lecture)’, pp. 69-94
Hargreaves, J.D., ‘From Strangers to Minorities in West Africa’, pp. 95-114
Edwards, J.H., ‘Religious Belief and Social Conformity: the ‘Converso’ Problem in Late-Medieval Córdoba’, pp. 115-128
Haigh, Christopher, ‘From Monopoly to Minority: Catholicism in Early ModernEngland’, pp. 129-148
Ó Tuathaigh, M.A.G., ‘The Irish in Nineteenth-Century Britain: Problems of Integration’,pp. 149-174
Sked, Alan, ‘Historians, the Nationality Question and the Downfall of the HabsburgEmpire’, pp. 175-194
Habakkuk, Sir John, ‘Presidential Address: The Rise and Fall of English LandedFamilies, 1600-1800: III. Did the Gentry Rise?’, pp. 195-218
Volume XXXII (1982)
Miller, John, ‘Charles II and his Parliaments’, pp. 1-24
Knowles, C.H., ‘The Resettlement of England after the Barons’ War, 1264-67’, pp. 25-42
Gibson, Margaret T., ‘Boethius in the Carolingian Schools’, pp. 43-56
Tyerman, C.J., ‘Marino Sanudo Torsello and the Lost Crusade: Lobbying in theFourteenth Century (The Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 57-74
McNeill, William H, ‘A Defence of World History (The Prothero Lecture)’, pp. 75-90
Jones, Michael, ‘’Bons Bretons et Bons Francoys’: The Language and Meaning ofTreason in Later Medieval France’, pp. 91-112
Duke, Alastair, ‘From King and Country to King or Country? Loyalty and Treason in theRevolt of the Netherlands’, pp. 113-136
Bennett, G.V., ‘English Jacobitism, 1710-1715: Myth and Reality’, pp. 137-152
Edwards, Owen Dudley, ‘Divided Treasons and Divided Loyalties: Roger Casement andOthers’, pp. 153-174
Kedward, H.R., ‘Patriots and Patriotism in Vichy France’, pp. 175-192
Holt, J.C., ‘Presidential Address: Feudal Society and the Family in Early MedievalEngland: I. The Revolution of 1066’, pp. 193-212
Volume XXXIII (1983)
Canning, Joseph P., ‘Ideas of State in Thirteenth and Fourteenth-Century Commentatorson the Roman Law’, pp. 1-28
Forster, G.C.F., ‘Government in Provincial England under the Later Stuarts’, pp. 29-48
Powell, Edward, ‘Arbitration and the Law in England in the Late Middle Ages (TheAlexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 49-68
Zemon Davies, Natalie, ‘Beyond the Market: Books as Gifts in Sixteenth Century France(The Prothero Lecture)’, pp. 69-88
Harding, Alan, ‘The Origins of the Crime of Conspiracy’, pp. 89-108
Lindley, K.J., ‘Riot Prevention and Control in Early Stuart London’, pp. 109-126
Styles, John, ‘Sir John Fielding and the Problem of Criminal Investigation in Eighteenth-Century England’, pp. 127-150
Jones, D.J.V., ‘The New Police, Crime and People in England and Wales, 1829-1888’,pp. 151-168
Foster, R.F., ‘History and the Irish Question’, pp. 169-192
Holt, J.C., ‘Presidential Address: Feudal Society and the Family in Early MedievalEngland: II. Notions of Patrimony’, pp. 193-221
Volume XXXIV (1984)
Holt, J.C., ‘Presidential Address: Feudal Society and the Family in Early MedievalEngland: III. Patronage and Politics’, pp. 1-26
Barber, M.C., ‘The Social Context of the Templars’, pp. 27-46
Dinwiddy, J.R., ‘Early-Nineteenth-Century Reactions to Benthamism’, pp. 47-70
Hook, Judith A., ‘Justice, Authority and the Creation of the Ancien Regime in Italy’, pp.71-90
Rosser, A.G., ‘The Essence of Medieval Urban Communities: the Vill of Westminster1200-1540 (The Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 91-112
Warren, W.L., ‘The Myth of Norman Administrative Efficiency (The Prothero Lecture)’,pp. 113-132
King, Edmund, ‘The Anarchy of King Stephen’s Reign’, pp. 133-154
Morrill, John, ‘The Religious Context of the English Civil War’, pp. 155-178
Volume XXXV (1985)
Holt, J.C., ‘Presidential Address: Feudal Society and the Family in Early MedievalEngland: IV. The Heiress and the Alien’, pp. 1-28
Collini, Stefan, ‘The Idea of ‘Character’ in Victorian Political Thought’, pp. 29-50
Sheppard, Frances, ‘London and the Nation in the Nineteenth Century (The ProtheroLecture)’, pp. 51-74
Reuter, Timothy, ‘Plunder and Tribute in the Carolingian Empire’, pp. 75-94
Ramsay, Nigel, ‘Retained Legal Counsel, c. 1275-1475 (The Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp.95-112
Reynolds, David, ‘The Churchill Government and the Black American Troops in Britainduring World War II’, pp. 113-134
Hunter, Michael, ‘The Problem of ‘Atheism’ in Early Modern England’, pp. 135-158
MacKay, Angus, ‘The Hispanic-Converso Predicament’, pp. 159-180
Volume XXXVI (1986)
Aylmer, G.E., ‘Presidential Address: Collective Mentalities in mid Seventeenth-CenturyEngland: I. The Puritan Outlook’, pp. 1-26
Darwin, J.G., ‘The Fear of Falling: British Politics and Imperial Decline since 1900’, pp.27-44
Nelson, Janet L., ‘’A King across the Sea’: Alfred in Continental Perspective’, pp. 45-68
Sharpe, J.A., ‘Plebeian Marriage in Stuart England: some Evidence from PopularLiterature’, pp. 69-90
Garnett, George, ‘Coronation and Propaganda: some Implications of the Norman Claimto the Throne of England in 1066 (The Alexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 91-116
Hempton, David, ‘Methodism in Irish Society, 1770-1830 (Proxime accessit for theAlexander Prize)’, pp. 117-142
Cannon, John, ‘The Survival of the British Monarchy (The Prothero Lecture)’, pp. 143-164
Smith, R.M., ‘Women’s Property Rights under Customary Law: Some Developments inthe Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries’, pp. 165-194
Keynes, Simon, ‘A Tale of Tow Kings: Alfred the Great and Aethelred the Unready’, pp.195-218
Volume XXXVII (1987)
Aylmer, G.E., ‘Presidential Address: Collective Mentalities in mid Seventeenth-CenturyEngland: II. Royalist Attitudes’, pp. 1-30
Fletcher, R.A., ‘Reconquest and Crusade in Spain, c. 1050-1150’, pp. 31-48
Ramsden, John, ‘’A Party for Owners or a Party for Earners? How far did the BritishConservative Party really change after 1945?’, pp. 49-64
Smith, Paul, ‘Disraeli’s Politics’, pp. 65-86
Given-Wilson, C. ‘The King and the Gentry in Fourteenth-Century England (TheAlexander Prize Essay)’, pp. 87-102
Thomas, Keith, ‘Numeracy in Early Modern England (The Prothero Lecture)’, pp. 103-132
Goodman, Anthony, ‘John of Gaunt: Paradigm of the late Fourteenth-Century’, pp. 133-148
Blackbourn, David, ‘Politics as Theatre: metaphors of the Stage in German History’, pp.149-168
Volume XXXVIII (1988)
Aylmer, G.E., ‘Presidential Address: Collective Mentalities in mid Seventeenth-CenturyEngland: III. Varieties of Radicalism’, pp. 1-26
Johnson, Paul, ‘Conspicuous Consumption and Working-Class Culture in late Victorianand Edwardian Britain’, pp. 27-42
Mettam, Roger, ‘Power, Status and Precedence: rivalries among the provincial élites ofLouis XIV’s France’, pp. 43-62
Clark, Peter, ‘The ‘Mother Gin’ Controversy in Early Eighteenth-Century England’, pp.63-84
Russell, Conrad, ‘The First Army Plot of 1641’, pp. 85-106
Chibnall, Marjorie, ‘The Empress Matilda and Church Reform (The Prothero Lecture)’,pp. 107-130
Cross, Claire, ‘Monasticism and Society in the Diocese of York, 1520-1540’, pp. 131-146
Hilton, Boyd, ‘Lord Liverpool: the art of politics and the practice of government’, pp.147-170
Volume XXXIX (1989)
Aylmer, G.E., ‘Presidential Address: Collective Mentalities in mid Seventeenth-CenturyEngland: IV. Cross Currents: Neutrals, Trimmers and Others’, pp. 1-22
James, Edward, ‘Burial and Status in the Early Medieval West’, pp. 23-40
Evans, R.J.W., ‘The Hapsburgs and the Hungarian Problem, 1790-1848’, pp. 41-62
Bell, P.M.H., ‘Censorship, propaganda and public opinion: the case of the Katyn graves,1943’, pp. 63-84
Rex, Richard, ‘The English Campaign against Luther in the 1520s (The Alexander PrizeEssay)’, pp. 85-106
Cuddy, Neil, ‘Anglo-Scottish Union and the Court of James I, 1603-1625 (The AlexanderPrize Essay, proxime accessit)’, pp. 107-124
Burrow, J.W., ‘Victorian Historians and the Royal Historical Society (The ProtheroLecture)’, pp. 125-140
Macintyre, Angus, ‘Lord George Bentinck and the Protectionists: a lost cause?’, pp. 141-167
Britnell, R.H., ‘England and Northern Italy in the Early Fourteenth Century: theeconomic contrasts’, pp. 167-184
Volume XXXX (1990)
Thompson, F.M.L., ‘Presidential Address: English Landed Society in the TwentiethCentury: I. Property: Collapse and Survival’, pp. 1-24
D’Avray, David, ‘The Comparative Study of memorial Preaching’, pp. 25-42
Bonney, Richard, ‘Bodin and the Development of the French Monarchy’ pp. 43-62
Innes, Joanna, ‘Parliament and the Shaping of Eighteenth-Century English Social Policy’,pp. 63-92
Adamson, J.S.A., ‘The Baronial Context of the English Civil War (The Alexander PrizeEssay)’, pp. 93-120
Skinner, Quentin, ‘Thomas Hobbes on the Proper Signification of Liberty (The ProtheroLecture)’, pp. 121-152
Pollard, Sidney, ‘Reflections on Entrepreneurship and Culture in European Societies’, pp.153-174
Harris, Jose, ‘Enterprise and Welfare States: a Comparative Perspective’, pp. 175-196
Webster, Charles, ‘Doctors, Public Service and Profit: General Practitioners and theNational Health Service’, pp. 197-216
Mayr-Harting, Henry, ‘Tow Abbots in Politics: Wala of Corbie and Bernard ofClairvaux’, pp. 217-238
Lonsdale, John, ‘Constructing Mau Mau’, pp. 239-260