The Idea of the City in Nineteenth-century BritainBruce Ivor Coleman Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1973 - Всего страниц: 241 |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 26
Стр. 17
... Church was closely identified with political conservatism , its strength lay in rural society , and its spokesmen tended to distrust the cities on many counts . Despite the churches and schools it built , the parishes it sub - divided ...
... Church was closely identified with political conservatism , its strength lay in rural society , and its spokesmen tended to distrust the cities on many counts . Despite the churches and schools it built , the parishes it sub - divided ...
Стр. 40
... church and chapels for nine thousand out of a population of seventy - five ! -Nor is this deficiency confined to the metropolis . In Liverpool , out of 94,000 inhabitants only 21,000 can be accommodated in the churches ; in Manchester ...
... church and chapels for nine thousand out of a population of seventy - five ! -Nor is this deficiency confined to the metropolis . In Liverpool , out of 94,000 inhabitants only 21,000 can be accommodated in the churches ; in Manchester ...
Стр. 172
... churches are making the discovery that seething in the very centre of our great cities , concealed by the thinnest crust of civilization and decency , is a vast mass of moral corruption , of heart- breaking misery and absolute ...
... churches are making the discovery that seething in the very centre of our great cities , concealed by the thinnest crust of civilization and decency , is a vast mass of moral corruption , of heart- breaking misery and absolute ...
Содержание
The proliferation of the wens | 22 |
4 The rise and fall of imperial London 1811 | 36 |
Passion and partisanship | 55 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 42
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
aggregation agricultural become C. F. G. Masterman capital causes centre Charles Booth Chartism Christian Church city's civic civilisation civilization classes Coketown commercial condition Coningsby Corn Laws countryside crowded disease districts dwellings Ebenezer Elliott Ebenezer Howard economic Edwardian period Edwin Chadwick energies England enterprise evils existence Extracts factory fear feeling forces future George Gissing growth houses human ideal improvement increase individual industrial towns inevitable influence inhabitants interest irreligion J. A. Hobson labour laissez-faire Lancashire land large towns less Liberal live London look Manchester masses Masterman means ment metropolis mind misery modern moral municipal nature never nineteenth century novel parish past physical political poor population poverty present problems question reform religious Robert Southey rural society Ruskin sanitary seemed slums social Southey spirit streets things thousand tion trade urban society villages whole