House of Lords

Connections

Connections Author name Sort descending Excerpt
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Dorothy Richardson
Her essays in this journal reflect her wide literary and social knowledge; they include Days with Walt Whitman, Thearchy and Socialism, Down with the Lords, and Nietzsche.
Hanscombe, Gillian. The Art of Life: Dorothy Richardson and the Development of Feminist Consciousness. Peter Owen.
190
Other Life Event E. Arnot Robertson
On 27 September 1946 MGM complained to the BBC about an allegedly hostile review by EAR . This led her to a court battle. The High Court awarded her £1,500 in libel damages, but on...
Reception Martin Ross
A passage from the book was read in the House of Lords in 1907, in support of a proposal to build a Channel Tunnel.
Collis, Maurice. Somerville and Ross: A Biography. Faber and Faber.
147
Family and Intimate relationships Caroline Scott
Caroline's father, born Archibald James Edward Stewart , was the son of a duke's daughter (though this identity became a matter for dispute). He was one of two claimants to the landed estates of his...
Family and Intimate relationships Ann Masterman Skinn
She, it appears, had petitioned first, alleging his impotence and cruelty.
Staves, Susan. “Matrimonial Discord in Fiction and in Court: The Case of Ann Masterman”. Fetter’d or Free?: British Women Novelists 1670-1815, edited by Cecilia Macheski and Mary Anne Schofield, Ohio University Press, pp. 169-85.
179
He, however, secured his divorce, and within a week had added to it a civil divorce, adjudged by a jury at the Court of King's Bench
Occupation Alfred Tennyson
Having twice refused a title, AT accepted, at the urging of Queen Victoria , a baronetcy and seat in the House of Lords , becoming the first English writer to be raised to the peerage.
Ricks, Christopher. Tennyson. Macmillan.
288
Wealth and Poverty Elizabeth Thomas
This was the low point (so far) in Thomas's life. Gwinnett had changed his will less than three weeks before his death, and left her 600 pounds, but his family ensured that it did not...
Publishing Melesina Trench
MT issued another fighting work at Southampton: a single-sheet Circular sent to the Lords , previous to the Second Reading of the Bill for Ameliorating the Fate of Climbing Boys.
OCLC WorldCat. http://www.oclc.org/firstsearch/content/worldcat/. Accessed 1999.
Textual Production Melesina Trench
It appears from the only two extant library listings of this tract or broadside (in the New York Public Library and the University of Texas at Austin ) that the title was added in Trench's...
politics Flora Tristan
With the help of a Turkish diplomat she met while in London, FT attended sessions in the British House of Commons and House of Lords disguised as a Turkish gentleman.
Tristan, Flora. Flora Tristan’s London Journal, 1840. Translators Palmer, Dennis and Giselle Pincetl, Charles River Books.
55
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Flora Tristan
According to critic Susan Grogan , the book defies generic classification, blending elements of the political tract, the novel, and the statistical enquiry into social conditions.
Grogan, Susan. Flora Tristan: Life Stories. Routledge.
71
Promenades details FT 's various trips to England...
Family and Intimate relationships Anna Jane Vardill
AJV 's mother was born Agnes Birtwhistle in 1752 at Skipton in Yorkshire, into a family which was a local power there and over the Scottish border at Gatehouse of Fleet. Anna Jane...
politics Marina Warner
In a 1992 interview, MW stated that she used to be a Republican, but that in middle age she is becoming less radical, with a larger share of royalist sympathies. She noted that there is...
Textual Features Susanna Watts
Ephemera of all kinds have been bound in: family anecdotes, a letter of William Cowper of 1788, a Hindu Primer (or alphabet), a railway ticket of 1839, women's parliamentary petitions against slavery of 1833 (one...
politics Winifred Maxwell, Countess of Nithsdale
WMCN had little hope she could secure a pardon for a Catholic rebel, but nevertheless she tried. She drummed up support, appeared regularly in the gallery at the House of Lords , organized a petition...

Timeline

November 1963: Hereditary peeresses (those few women inheriting...

National or international item

November 1963

Hereditary peeresses (those few women inheriting a peerage in their own right) were first admitted to the House of Lords .

1967: Barbara Wootton (created the first woman...

National or international item

1967

Barbara Wootton (created the first woman life peer in 1958) became deputy speaker of the House of Lords , first woman to sit on the woolsack
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
in an institution which she saw as democratically indefensible...

4-5 July 1967: The Homosexual Law Reform Bill passed its...

Building item

4-5 July 1967

The Homosexual Law Reform Bill passed its third and final reading in the House of Commons : scheduled for the late-night slot on 4 July, it passed when 101 supporters remained for the final vote...

1976: A prosecution for blasphemy was brought against...

Building item

1976

A prosecution for blasphemy was brought against the magazine Gay News, for representing Jesus Christ as sexually attracted to men.

9 March 1976: The Trade Union and Labour Relations Bill...

National or international item

9 March 1976

The Trade Union and Labour Relations Bill passed the House of Lords : some political analysts felt this signalled the end of full employment, even the end of the welfare state.

October 1981: Conservative career politician Baroness Janet...

National or international item

October 1981

Conservative career politician Baroness Janet Young became Leader of the House of Lords , the first woman to hold this position.

November 1981: Shirley Williams (daughter of Vera Brittain)...

Women writers item

November 1981

Shirley Williams (daughter of Vera Brittain ) became the first member of the Gang of Four, leaders of the newly-founded Social Democratic Party , to win a seat in Parliament : for Crosby, Lancashire.

1987: Three men were arrested in England for the...

Building item

1987

Three men were arrested in England for the private and consensual practice of sado-masochism.

23 October 1991: The House of Lords ruled that a husband can...

Building item

23 October 1991

The House of Lords ruled that a husband can be guilty of marital rape; this provision thus became part of British law.

1992: The House of Lords decision in the so-called...

Building item

1992

The House of Lords decision in the so-called Spanner Case (Regina v. Brown) held consensual sado-masochistic sexual acts to constitute criminal assault if they produce non-trifling bodily harm.

11 November 1992: The General Synod of the Church of England...

Building item

11 November 1992

The General Synod of the Church of England voted to allow women priests; this was the culmination of a long campaign for the ordination of women.

19 November 1999: At the conclusion of the parliamentary session,...

National or international item

19 November 1999

At the conclusion of the parliamentary session, the House of Lords came to an end as a hereditary legislative chamber, at 5.32 p.m.

19 December 2001: Under a newly defined practice of internment,...

National or international item

19 December 2001

Under a newly defined practice of internment, a dozen foreign nationals, all male, were arrested and held in Britain on suspicion of links to organizations suspected of terrorist activity.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.