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 38
Стр. 9
... rural society became less common . Comparisons with the countryside rarely suggested that rural society as a whole found the cities wanting . Even romantic mediaevalism gained an urban dimension as the Gothic revival , tiring of ruined ...
... rural society became less common . Comparisons with the countryside rarely suggested that rural society as a whole found the cities wanting . Even romantic mediaevalism gained an urban dimension as the Gothic revival , tiring of ruined ...
Стр. 19
... rural society also bore the responsibilities of national government , and their associations with the universities and the professions helped their prestige in intellectual circles . Tory critics of the cities saw the aristocracy as the ...
... rural society also bore the responsibilities of national government , and their associations with the universities and the professions helped their prestige in intellectual circles . Tory critics of the cities saw the aristocracy as the ...
Стр. 24
... rural society during the post - war agricultural depression . He blamed the politicians and financiers of ' the great wen ' for the dislocation caused by successive inflation and deflation and saw taxation of the land to pay interest on ...
... rural society during the post - war agricultural depression . He blamed the politicians and financiers of ' the great wen ' for the dislocation caused by successive inflation and deflation and saw taxation of the land to pay interest on ...
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