ANNUAL LIST OF PUBLICATIONS IN 2013
List of publications on the economic and social history of Great Britain and Ireland published in 2013
Matthew Hale,
Graham Raymond,
Catherine Wright,
Matthew Hale
Search for more papers by this authorGraham Raymond
Search for more papers by this authorCatherine Wright
Search for more papers by this authorMatthew Hale,
Graham Raymond,
Catherine Wright,
Matthew Hale
Search for more papers by this authorGraham Raymond
Search for more papers by this authorCatherine Wright
Search for more papers by this authorFirst published: 01 October 2014
(The place of publication is London and the date 2013 unless otherwise stated.)

1. Original documents
- Adams, S. and Gehring, D. S., ‘Elizabeth I's former tutor reports on the Parliament of 1559: Johannes Spithovious to the Chancellor of Denmark, 27th February 1559’, English Historical Review, 128, pp. 35–54.
- K. E. Beebe, ed., The McCulloch Examinations of the Cambuslang Revival (1742): conversion narratives from the Scottish Evangelical Awakening (Scottish History Society, 6th ser., 5 and 6).
- M. Bird, ed., The diary of Mary Hardy, 1773–1809. Kingston upon Thames: Burnham Press.
- Bower, D., ‘Further light on Ogilby and Morgan's Map of London (1676)’, Imago Mundi, 65, pp. 280–287.
- Brod, M., ‘New light on the Abingdon Monks' Map’, Oxoniensia, LXXVII, pp. 87–98.
- N. P. Brooks and S. E. Kelly, eds., Charters of Christ Church Canterbury. Oxford: Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press.
- Carter, M., ‘Brother Grayson's Bible: a previously unrecorded book from St Mary's Abbey York’, Nottingham Medieval Studies Journal, 57, pp. 287–302.
- A. Chandler and C. Hansen, eds., Observing Vatican II: the confidential reports of the Archbishop of Canterbury's Representative, Bernard Pawley, 1961–1965, Camden, 5th ser., 43.
- Chiu, H. and Juste, D., ‘The De tonitruis attributed to Bede: an early medieval treatise on divination by thunder translated from Irish’, Traditio, 68, pp. 97–124.
- P. Coss and J. C. L. Lewis, eds., Coventry Priory Register (Dugdale Society, 46).
- D. Crowley, ed., The minute books of Froxfield Almshouse, 1714–1866 (Wiltshire Record Society, 66).
- De Mézerac-Zanetti, A., ‘Reforming the liturgy under Henry VIII: the instructions of John Clerk, Bishop of Bath and Wells (PRO,SP6/3, fos 42r–44v)’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 64, pp. 96–111.
- R. W. Dunning and M. B. McDermott, eds., Church accounts, 1458–1559 (Somerset Record Society, 95).
- Falvey, H., ‘Making the boundaries: William Jordan's 1633 pre-enclosure survey of Duffield Frith (Derbyshire)’, Agricultural History Review, 61, pp. 1–18.
- Finlay, J., comp., Admission Register of Notaries Public in Scotland, 1700–1799, I: 1700–1769; II: 1770–1799 (Scottish Record Society, new ser., 36) (2012).
- Forde, H., ‘ “A Quaker Post-Bag”: a century on’, Derbyshire Archaeological Society Record Series, 133, pp. 152–165.
- M. Gardiner and C. Whittick, eds., Accounts and records of the Manor of Mote in Iden: 1442–1551, 1673 (Sussex Record Society, 92) (2011).
- Geaman, K. L., ‘A personal letter written by Anne of Bohemia’, English Historical Review, 128, pp. 1086–1094.
- T. Hall, ed., Estate letters from the time of John, 2nd Duke of Montagu 1709–39. Northampton: Northamptonshire Record Society.
- D. Hodgkins, ed., The Diary of Edward Watkin (Chetham Society, 3rd ser., 51).
- H. Kleineke, ed., The Chancery case between Nicholas Radford and Thomas Tremayne: the Exeter depositions of 1439 (Devon and Cornwall Record Society, 55).
- Lawson, J. A., The Elizabethan new year's gift exchanges, 1559–1603. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- G. Lawton, ed., Church Lawton manor court rolls 1631–1860. Liverpool: Record Society of Lancashire and Cheshire.
- J. MacAskill, ed., The Highland destitution of 1837: government aid and public subscription (Scottish History Society, 6th ser., 7).
- A. R. MacDonald and M. Verschuur, eds., Records of the Convention of Royal Burghs, 1555; 1631–1648 (Scottish History Society, 6th ser., 3).
- R. Malster, ed., The minute books of the Suffolk Humane Society: a pioneer lifesaving organisation and the world's first sailing lifeboat, 1806–1892 (Suffolk Records Society, 56).
- S. Mandelbrote and J. H. R. Davis, eds., The Warden's Punishment Book of All Souls College, Oxford, 1601–1850 (Oxford Historical Society, new ser., 45).
- Marx, C., The Middle English Liber Aureus and Gospel of Nicodemus: edited from London, British Library, MS Egerton 2658. Heidelberg: Winter.
- Miller, E., ‘ “Pauper lunatics and their treatment”, by Joshua Harrison Stallard (1870)’, History of Psychiatry, 24, pp. 356–368.
- H. M. Milne, ed., The legal papers of James Boswell (Stair Society, 60).
- A. Munden, ed., The religious census of 1851: Northumberland and County Durham (Surtees Society, 216) (2012).
- A. Orde, ed., Letters of John Buddle to Lord Londonderry, 1820–1843 (Surtees Society, 217).
- N. Pattwell, ed., Exornatorium Curatorum: edited from Wynkyn de Worde's text in Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, Sp. 335.2. Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter.
- Prunier, C., ‘Representations of the “state of popery” in Scotland in the 1720s and 1730s’, Innes Review, 64, pp. 120–226.
10.3366/inr.2013.0056 Google Scholar
- S. Raban, ed. and trans., The accounts of Godfrey of Crowland, Abbot of Peterborough, 1299–1321 (Northamptonshire Record Society, 45) (2011).
- Roach, L., ‘Penitential discourse in the Diplomas of King Æthelred “the Unready” ’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 64, pp. 258–276.
- Robinson, J., The day the bridges fell: being an account of the great flood of 1771 AD which inundated the north east of England and its neighbouring counties: a compilation with additional notes. Co. Durham: Eocrantis Publishing.
- Rogers, A., ‘Building accounts for Pontefract Castle, Michaelmas 1406–Michaelmas 1407’, Journal of the British Archaeological Association, 166. pp. 140–156.
- Rothery, E. A., National taxation and local rates in Southampton in the second half of the sixteenth century; with a memoir of the author, Southampton Records Series, 46.
- Saul, N., ‘An early private indenture of retainer: the agreement between Hugh Despenser the Younger and Sir Robert de Shirland’, English Historical Review, 128, pp. 519–534.
- G. T. Smith, ed., Summary justice in the city: a selection of cases heard at the Guildhall Justice Room, 1752–1781 (London Record Society, 48).
- S. Stewart, ed., Royal justice in Surrey, 1258–1269 (Surrey Record Society, 45).
- Sutton, A. F. and Visser-Fuchs L., ‘The sun in splendour and the rose reborn: a Yorkist mayor of Lincoln and his book of hours’, Nottingham Medieval Studies Journal, 57, pp. 195–246.
10.1484/J.NMS.1.103671 Google Scholar
- Toseland, A., Estate letters from the time of John, 2nd Duke of Montagu, 1709–39, P. H. McKay and D. N. Hall, eds. and trans. (Northamptonshire Record Society, 46).
- B. Trinder, ed., Victorian Banburyshire: three memoirs. Sarah Beesley, 1812–1892; Thomas Ward Boss, 1825–1903; Thomas Butler Gunn, 1863 (Banbury Historical Society, 33).
- Tringham, N., ‘The 1655 petition against the inclosure of Needwood Forest’, Transactions of the Staffordshire Archaeological and Historical Society, XLVI, pp. 72–96.
- Turville-Petre, T., ‘A Nottinghamshire dispute: English documents of 1438–42’, Nottingham Medieval Studies Journal, 57, pp. 171–194.
10.1484/J.NMS.1.103670 Google Scholar
- S. Watts, ed., Staffordshire Glebe Terriers, 1585–1884, pt. I: Abbots Bromley–Knutton; pt. II: Lapley–Yoxall (Staffordshire Record Society, 4th ser., 22 and 23) (2 vols., 2009).
- B. Wells-Furby, ed., Medieval property transactions in Rutland: abstracts of feet of fines 1197–1509. Oakham: Rutland Local History & Record Society.
- J. Wickham and A. Benson, eds., Extracts from the minutes of the Board of Guardians of Spalding Union Workhouse. Lincoln: Lincolnshire Family History Society.
2. Agriculture and agrarian society
- Ang, J. B., Banerjee, R., and Madsen, J. B., ‘Innovation and productivity advances in British agriculture: 1620–1850’, Southern Economic Journal, 80, pp. 162–186.
- Bekar, C. T. and Reed, C. G., ‘Land markets and inequality: evidence from medieval England’, European Review of Economic History, 17, pp. 294–317.
- Bourde, A. J., The influence of England on the French agronomes, 1750–1789. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Bowen, J. P., ‘From medieval deer park to an enclosed agricultural and developing industrial landscape: the post-medieval evolution of Lilleshall Park, Shropshire’, Midland History, 38, pp. 194–212.
10.1179/0047729X13Z.00000000026 Google Scholar
- Brunt, L. and Cannon, E., ‘The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth: the English Corn Returns as a data source in economic history’, European Review of Economic History, 17, pp. 318–339.
- Burton, A., Life on the farm. Andover: Pitkin Publishing.
- Campion, L., Moments in a lifetime: the farming diaries of Len Campion. Murton: Redstone Books.
- Dampier-Whetham, C., Politics and the land. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Ebert, A., ‘Nectar for the taking: the popularization of scientific bee culture in England, 1609–1809’, Agricultural History, 85 (2011), pp. 322–343.
- Fudge, E., ‘Looking for livestock in wills, 1620–1635’, Essex Journal, 48, pp. 49–54.
- Gazeley, I. and Horrell, S., ‘Nutrition in the English agricultural labourer's household over the course of the long nineteenth century’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 757–784.
- Ginn, P. and Goodman, R., Tudor monastery farm: life in rural England 500 years ago. BBC Books.
- Griffin, C. J., ‘Animal maiming, intimacy and the politics of share life: the bestial and the beastly in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century England’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 37 (2012), pp. 301–316.
- Griffin, C. J., Protest, politics and work in rural England, 1700–1850. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Hamilton, J. and Thomas, R., ‘Pannage, pulses and pigs: isotopic and zooarchaeological evidence for changing pig management practices in later medieval England’, Medieval Archaeology, 56, pp. 234–259.
- Harris, B., ‘Landowners and urban society in eighteenth-century Scotland’, Scottish Historical Review, 92, pp. 231–254.
- Henderson, W. C., A farm boy recalls: wartime in the East Neuk of Fife. Crail: Crail Museum Trust.
- Hills, P., ‘The journal of James Wilson: an insight into life in north east Scotland toward the end of the nineteenth century’, Agricultural History, 86 (2012), pp. 1–22.
- Hipkin, A. and Pittman, S., ‘ “A grudge among the people”: commercial conflict, conspiracy, petitioning and poaching in Cranbrook, 1594–1606’, Rural History, 24, pp. 101–125.
- Hipkin, S., ‘The conduct of the coastal metropolitan corn trade during the later seventeenth century: an analysis of the evidence of the Exchequer Port Books’, Agricultural History Review, pp. 206–243.
- Holmes, H., ‘Agricultural implement makers in Scotland during the late nineteenth and early twentieth century’, Folk Life Journal of Ethnological Studies, pp. 44–74.
- Howell, D. W., ‘The land question in nineteenth-century Wales, Ireland, and Scotland: a comparative study’, Agricultural History Review, 61, pp. 83–110.
- R. W. Hoyle, ed., The farmer in England, 1650–1980. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Jgenson, D., ‘Running amuck: urban swine management in late medieval England’, Agricultural History, 87, pp. 429–451.
- Keibek, S. A. J. and Shaw-Taylor, L., ‘Early modern rural by-employments: a re-examination of the probate inventory evidence’, Agricultural History Review, 61, pp. 244–281.
- Kelly, M. and Ó Gráda, C., ‘Numerare est errare: agricultural output and food supply in England before and during the industrial revolution’, Journal of Economic History, 73, pp. 1132–1163.
- MacGillivray, N., ‘Dr John Mackenzie (1803–86): proponent of scientific agriculture and opponent of Highland emigration’, Journal of Scottish Historical Studies, 33, pp. 81–100.
10.3366/jshs.2013.0063 Google Scholar
- McDonagh, B., ‘Making and breaking property: negotiating enclosure and common rights in sixteenth-century England’, History Workshop Journal, 76, pp. 32–56.
- McRobertson, I. J. M., Landscapes of protest in the Scottish Highlands after 1914: the later Highland Land Wars. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Martin, J., ‘British game shooting in transition, 1900–1945’, Agricultural History, 85 (2011), pp. 204–224.
- Oosthuizen, S., Tradition and transformation in Anglo-Saxon England: archaeology, common rights and landscape. Bloomsbury Academic.
- Perrie, M., ‘Hobby farming among the Birmingham bourgeoisie: the Cadbury's and the Chamberlain's on their suburban estates, c. 1880–1914’, Agricultural History Review, pp. 111–134.
- Poole, K., ‘Engendering debate: animals and identity in Anglo-Saxon England’, Medieval Archaeology, 57, pp. 61–82.
- Richardson, A., Medieval field systems of Husthwaite: the evolution of field systems and settlement in Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, from the Saxon period to enclosure. York: Quacks Books.
- Roberts, M. J. D., ‘Gladstonian liberalism and environment protection, 1865–76’, English Historical Review, 128 , pp. 292–322.
- Sapoznik, A., ‘Resource allocation and peasant decision making: Oakington Cambridgeshire, 1360–99’, Agricultural History Review, pp. 187–205.
- Sapoznik, A., ‘The productivity of peasant agriculture: Oakington, Cambridgeshire, 1360–99’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 518–544.
- Sayer, K., ‘ “His footmarks on her shoulders”: the place of women within poultry keeping in the British countryside, c. 1880 to 1980’, Agricultural History Review, pp. 301–329.
- Sayer, K., ‘Animal machines: the public response to intensification in Great Britain, c. 1960–c. 1973’, Agricultural History, 87, pp. 473–501.
- Serjeantson, D., Farming and fishing in the Outer Hebrides AD 600 to 1700: the Udal, North Uist. Southampton: Highfield Press.
- Shannon, W. D., ‘The survival of true intercommoning in Lancashire in the early modern period’, Agricultural History, 86 (2012), pp. 169–191.
- Shave, S. A., ‘The impact of Sturges Bourne's poor law reforms in rural England’, Historical Journal, 56, pp. 399–429.
- Snell, K. D. M., ‘In or out of their place: the migrant poor in English art, 1740–1900’, Rural History, 24, pp. 73–100.
- Solar, P. M. and Hens, L., ‘Land under pressure: the value of Irish land in a period of rapid population growth, 1730–1844’, Agricultural History Review, 61, pp. 40–62.
- Thomas, R., Holmes, M., and Morris, J., ‘ “So bigge as bigge may be”: tracking size and shape change in domestic livestock in London (AD 1220–1900)’, Journal of Archaeological Science, 40, pp. 3309–3325.
- Waddell, G., Highland roots: the real story behind one Highland cottage. Glasgow: Gordon Waddell.
- Wales, T., ‘ “Living at their own hands”: policing poor households and the young in early modern rural England’, Agricultural History Review, 61, pp. 19–39.
- J. Whittle, ed., Landlords and tenants in Britain, 1440–1660: Tawney's Agrarian problem revisited. Woodbridge: Boydell.
- Williamson, T., Environment, society and landscape in early medieval England: time and topography. Woodbridge: Boydell.
- Wittering, S., Ecology of enclosure: the effect of enclosure on society, farming and the environment in South Cambridgeshire, 1798–1850. Bollington: Windgather.
- Woods, A., ‘Is prevention better than cure? The rise and fall of veterinary preventive medicine, c. 1950–1980’, Social History of Medicine, 26, pp. 113–131.
- Worth, R., ‘Clothing the landscape: change and the rural vision in the work of Thomas Hardy (1840–1928)’, Rural History, 24, pp. 199–215.
- Yates, M., ‘The market in freehold land, 1300–1509: the evidence of Feet of Fines’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 579–600.
3. Industry and internal trade
- T. Alborn and S. A. Murphy, eds., Anglo-American life insurance, 1800–1914. Pickering & Chatto.
- Almeroth-Williams, T., ‘The brewery horse and the importance of equine power in Hanoverian London’, Urban History, 40, pp. 416–441.
- Anderson, S., ‘Medieval floor and roof tiles from Melrose Abbey, Scottish Borders, and the “Westminster tillers” ’, Medieval Archaeology, 57, pp. 238–250.
- Andrews, F. H., The British record industry during the reign of Edward VII: 1901–1910. London: City of London Phonograph and Gramophone Society.
- Arnold, A., ‘Assessing the financial performance of Pergamon Press, 1964–1980’, Accounting History Review, 23, pp. 117–139.
10.1080/21552851.2013.805505 Google Scholar
- Barber, S., The British film industry in the 1970s: capital, culture and creativity. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Barker, D., ‘ “Lost in oblivion”: James Noble of the Noble Comb’, Textile History, pp. 214–234.
- Bath, M., ‘The Four Seasons tapestries’, Textile History, 44, pp. 51–71.
- Berry, C., The idea of commercial society in the Scottish Enlightenment. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
- Blayney, P., The Stationers' Company and the printers of London, 1501–1557. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Brabham, P., Barry: the history of the yard and its locomotives. Hersham: OPC.
- Braggion, F. and Moore, L., ‘The economic benefits of political connections in late Victorian Britain’, Journal of Economic History, 73, pp. 142–176.
- Broadberry, S., Campbell B. M. S., and van Leeuwen, B., ‘When did Britain industrialise? The sectoral distribution of the labour force and labour productivity in Britain, 1381–1851’, Explorations in Economic History, 50, pp. 16–27.
- Broich, J., London: water and the making of the modern city. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press.
- Brown, J., Shepherds and shepherding. Oxford: Shire.
- Buxton, I., The battleship builders: constructing and arming British capital ships. Barnsley: Seaforth Publishing.
- Carnevali, F. and Newton, L., ‘Pianos for the people: from producer to consumer in Britain, 1851–1914’, Enterprise and Society, 14, pp. 37–70.
- Chapman, S. and Dalton, R., ‘Peter Nightingale, Richard Arkwright, and the Derwent Valley cotton mills, 1771–1818’, Derbyshire Archaeological Society Record Series, 133, 166–188.
- Colella, S., ‘ “That inscrutable something”: business in the periodical press’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 46, pp. 317–342.
- Crainey, T., The hidden story of the Kilsyth weavers. Glendaruel: Argyll Publishing.
- Cumberpatch, C., Roberts, I., Alldritt, D., Batt, C., Gaunt, G. D., Greenwood, D., Hudson, J., Hughes, M. J., Ixer, R. A., Meadows, J., Weston, P., and Young, J., ‘A Stamford ware pottery kiln in Pontefract: a geographical enigma and a dating dilemma’, Medieval Archaeology, 57, pp. 111–150.
- Davies, C. S., The Welsh dresser. Llandysul: Gwasg Gomer Press.
- Debney, J., Jewels of our city: Birmingham's jewellery quarter. Studley: Brewin Books.
- Dillane, F., Before George Eliot: Marian Evans and the periodical press. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Eade, S., Slate below: a study of Abercwmeiddaw and Abercorris quarries, the tramway and the social life of a Merionethshire village. Wales: Sara Eade.
- Earnshaw, A., David Brown Tractors, 1936–1964. Manchester: Nostalgia Road.
- Eisenberg, C., The rise of market society in England, 1066–1800. New York: Berghahn.
- Eliot, S., The history of Oxford University Press. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Ellis, C. and Leivers, M., ‘Excavations on the site of the Great Western Steamship Company's engine works, Bristol’, Post-Medieval Archaeology, 47, pp. 195–221.
- Foreman-Peck, J. and Hannah, L. ‘Some consequences of the early twentieth-century divorce of ownership from control’, Business History, 55, pp. 540–561.
- Fox, A., ‘ “Little story books” and “small pamphlets” in Edinburgh, 1680–1720: the making of the Scottish chapbook’, Scottish Historical Review, 92, pp. 207–230.
- Freeman, M., Pearson, R., and Taylor, J., ‘Law, politics and the governance of English and Scottish joint-stock companies, 1600–1850’, Business History, 55, pp. 633–649.
- Geneva, L., Shakespeare and the book trade. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Goddard, R., ‘Coal mining in medieval Nottinghamshire: consumers and producers in a nascent industry’, Transactions of the Thoroton Society, 116, pp. 95–116.
- Goddard, R., ‘Medieval business networks: St Mary's Guild and the borough court in later medieval Nottingham’, Urban History, 40, pp. 3–27.
- Goddard, R. and Musson, J., ‘A rich vein? Novel disseisin and the Trowell coalmine case of 1258’, English Historical Review, 128, pp. 239–262.
- Hare, J., ‘Inns, innkeepers and the society of later medieval England, 1350–1600’, Journal of Medieval History, 39, pp. 477–497.
- Harris, P., Mining in Turton. Turton: Turton Local History Society.
- Hearle, J. W. S., ‘The 20th century revolution in textile machines and processes, part 1: spinning and weaving’, Industrial Archaeology Review, 35, pp. 87–99.
- Heath, A., David Brown Tractors, 1965–1988. Manchester: Crécy Publishing.
- Helland, J., ‘Ishbel Aberdeen's “Irish” dresses: embroidery, display and meaning, 1886–1909’, Journal of Design History, 26, pp. 152–167.
- Holt, R. and Popp, A., ‘Emotion, succession, and the family firm: Josiah Wedgwood & Sons’, Business History, 55, pp. 892–909.
- Jaques, Z., Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass: a publishing history. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Kadane, M., The watchful clothier: the life of an eighteenth-century Protestant capitalist. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- Knox, H., The Scottish shale oil industry & mineral railway lines. Lydney: Lightmoor Press.
- Liebenau, J., ‘Modernizing the business of health: pharmaceuticals in Britain, in comparison with Germany and the United States, 1890–1940’, Industrial and Corporate Change, 22, pp. 807–847.
- Lofthouse, T., Cochrane Shipbuilders. Bristol: Bernard McCall.
- McCluskie, T., The rise and fall of Harland and Wolff. Stroud: History.
- McGovern, T. and McLean, T., ‘The growth and development of Clarke Chapman from 1864 to 1914’, Business History, 55, pp. 448–478.
- Marshall, G., London's industrial heritage. Stroud: History.
- Martland, P., Recording history: the British record industry, 1888–1931. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press.
- Moszkowicz, J., ‘Re-learning postmodernism in the history of graphic design: a (con)textual analysis of Design journal in the late 1960s’, Journal of Design History, 26, pp. 381–400.
- Nelson, H., The HappenStance story: chapter seven. Fife: HappenStance.
- Newberry, J., ‘Space of discipline and governmentality: the Singer sewing machine factory, Clydebank in the twentieth century’, Scottish Geographical Journal, 129, pp. 15–35.
- Nordberg, D. and McNulty, T., ‘Creating better boards through codification: possibilities and limitations in UK corporate governance, 1992–2010’, Business History, 55, pp. 348–374.
- O'Kane, F., Ireland and the picturesque: design, landscape painting and tourism 1700–1840. Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, Yale University Press.
- Osborne, R., Iron, steam & money: the making of the industrial revolution. Bodley Head.
- Palmer, M., Clarks: made to last: the story of Britain's best-known shoe firm. Profile Books.
- Pierce, E., ‘Jet cross pendants from the British Isle and beyond: forms, distribution and use’, Medieval Archaeology, 57, pp. 198–211.
- Roebuck, D., Mediation and arbitration in the middle ages: England 1154–1558. Oxford: Holo Books, Arbitration Press.
- Roodhouse, M., Black market Britain, 1939–1955. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Ryle, S., The making of Tesco: a story of British shopping. Bantam Press.
- Salmon, R., The formation of the Victorian literary profession. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Sandall, S., ‘Industry and community in the Forest of Dean, c. 1550–1832’, Family and Community History, 16, pp. 87–99.
- Scott, D. A., Leviathan: the rise of Britain as a world power. HarperPress.
- Simpson, E., Wish you were still here: the Scottish seaside holiday. Stroud: Amberley.
- Sjögren, G., ‘The rise and decline of the Birmingham cut-nail trade, c. 1811–1914’, Midland History, 38, pp. 36–57.
10.1179/0047729X13Z.00000000016 Google Scholar
- A. Slaven and H. Murphy, eds., Crossing the bar: an oral history of the British shipbuilding, ship repairing and marine engine-building industries in the age of decline, 1956–1990. St John's, Newfoundland: International Maritime Economic History Association.
- Stobart, J., Sugar and spice: grocers and groceries in provincial England, 1650–1830. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- M. Straznicky, ed., Shakespeare's stationers: studies in cultural bibliography. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press.
- Styles, J., ‘Spinners and the law: regulating yarn standards in the English worsted industries, 1550–1800’, Textile History, 44, pp. 145–170.
- Sutton, N., The DeLorean story: the car, the people, the scandal. Somerset: Haynes Publishing.
- Tennent, K. D., ‘A distribution revolution: changes in music distribution in the UK 1950–76’, Business History, 55, pp. 327–347.
- Tomory, L., ‘Fostering a new industry in the industrial revolution: Boulton & Watt and gaslight, 1800–1812’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 199–229.
- Turner, H., ‘The tapestry trade in Elizabethan London: products, purchasers and purveyors’, London Journal, 38, pp. 18–33.
- Unsworth, C., The British herring industry: the steam drifter years 1900–1960. Stroud: Amberley.
- Vaughan, J., The Kershaw camera story: a ‘great’ British company. Goring by Sea: Photrack.
- Walker, F., Shipbuilding in Britain. Oxford: Shire.
- Walker, S., Uniform penny post: handstruck paid postage stamps of England and Wales 1840–1853. Sutton Coldfield: GBPS.
- Wall, C., An architecture of parts: architects, building workers and industrialization in Britain 1940–1970. Routledge.
- Ward, A., The other side of Airfix: sixty years of toys, games & crafts. Barnsley: Remember When.
- Watkinson, J., Scout Motors of Salisbury, 1902–1921. Salisbury: South Wiltshire Industrial Archaeology Society.
- Whannel, D., The Trojan horse: the growth of commercial sponsorship. New York: Bloomsbury.
- Wild, A. M., ‘Capability Brown, the aristocracy, and the cultivation of the eighteenth-century British landscaping industry’, Enterprise and Society, 14, pp. 237–270.
- Williams, J., ‘A toilsome task of industry’: copper mining and smelting in Wales. Llanrwst: Carreg Gwalch.
- Wilson, J. F., Building co-operation: a business history of the Co-operative Group, 1863–2013. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Wilson, J., Webster, A., and Vorberg-Rugh, R., ‘The co-operative movement in Britain: from crisis to “renaissance”, 1950–2010’, Enterprise and Society, 14, pp. 271–302.
- Zahedieh, N., ‘Colonies, copper, and the market for inventive activity in England and Wales, 1680–1730’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 805–825.
4. Overseas trade and overseas relations
- S. Ahern, ed., Affect and abolition in the Anglo-Atlantic, 1770–1830. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Albert, S., ‘The wartime “special relationship”, 1941–5: Isaiah Berlin, Freya Stark, and Mandate Palestine’, Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England, 45, pp. 103–130.
- Alexander, N., ‘Retailing in international markets, 1900–2010: a response to Godley and Hang's Globalisation and the evolution of international retailing: a comment on Alexander's “British overseas retailing, 1900–1960” ’, Business History, 55, pp. 302–312.
- C. Anderson and A. Cohen, eds., The government and administration of Africa, 1880–1939. Pickering & Chatto.
- Attard, B., ‘Bridgeheads, “colonial places” and the Queensland financial crisis of 1866’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 41, pp. 11–36.
- Auerbach, S., ‘Margaret Tart Lao She, and the opium-master's wife: race and class among Chinese commercial immigrants in London and Australia, 1866–1929’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 55, pp. 35–64.
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- Hall, P., ‘Underground as city maker: London versus Paris, 1863–2013’, London Journal, 38, pp. 177–183.
- Holland, J., Dr Beeching's axe: 50 years on: illustrated memories of Britain's lost railways. Newton Abbot: David & Charles.
- Johnson, P., Narrow gauge railways. Botley: Shire.
- Jones, O., Ghobadian A., O'Regan N., and Antcliff, V., ‘Dynamic capabilities in a sixth-generation family firm: entrepreneurship and the Bibby Line’, Business History, 55, pp. 910–941.
- Keate, D., ‘Celebrating the Underground's architectural legacy’, London Journal, 38, pp. 265–273.
- Keeley, M., Midland Red bus garages. Hersham: Ian Allan Publishing.
- Kennedy, J., ‘Measuring the impact of the Beeching axe’, Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society, 216, pp. 21–32.
- Kent, D., ‘Containing disorder in the “Age of Equipoise”: troops, trains, and the telegraph’, Social History, 38, pp. 308–327.
- Langham, R., The North Eastern Railway in the First World War. Stroud: Fonthill.
- Liffen, J., ‘Some early Marconi experimental apparatus reappraised’, International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology, 83, pp. 165–186.
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- Longworth, H., BR Mark 1 & Mark 2 coaching stock. Shepperton: OPC.
- Maggs, C. G., The Bristol-Radstock-Frome Line. Usk: Oakwood Press.
- Messenger, M., ‘Light railways before 1896’, Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society, 218, pp. 2–9.
- Moore, A., ‘The pioneering Markfield to Bardon wire tramway’, Leicestershire Historian, 49, pp. 16–21.
- Morse, G., British railways in the 1970s and '80s. Oxford: Shire.
- Nevell, M., ‘Bridgewater: the archaeology of the first arterial industrial canal’, Industrial Archaeology Review, 35, pp. 1–21.
- O'Neill, I., ‘Dealing with newsmongers: news, trust, and letters in the British world ca. 1670–1730’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 76, pp. 215–233.
- Ovenden, M., London Underground by design. Penguin Books.
- Pottinger, J., Wooden fishing boats of Scotland. Stroud: History.
- Poulton-Smith, A., Beeching: 50 years on. Stroud: History.
- Prance, R., West Country railway memories: rose-tinted reflections of some rural railways past and present. Usk: Oakwood Press.
- Rochester, E., Mind the gap: a London Underground miscellany. Chichester: Summersdale.
- Rockett, B., The Penrhyn quarry railways in 16mm scale. Bridgnorth: Theodore Press (2012).
- Ross, D., The Caledonian: Scotland's imperial railway: a history. Catrine: Stenlake Publishing Ltd.
- Shill, R., ‘James Walker and engineering the Birmingham canal navigations’, Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society, 217, pp. 27–39.
- Smith, R. E., Portskewett railways. Bristol: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.
- Smith, R. E., The Bristol & South Wales Union Railway and the New Passage ferry. Bristol: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.
- Solar, P. M., ‘Opening to the east: shipping between Europe and Asia, 770–1830’, Journal of Economic History, 73, pp. 625–661.
- Taylor, J., A–Z of British bus bodies. Ramsbury: Crowood Press.
- Thomas, J. R., The industrial tramways of the Vale of Llangollen. Usk: Oakwood Press.
- Trevelyan, R., Men, machines & maintenance at Exmouth Junction: a personal perspective. Southampton: Noodle Books.
- Turner, D., Victorian and Edwardian railway travel. Oxford: Shire.
- Turton, K., Private owner wagons: a twelfth collection. Lydney: Lightmoor Press.
- Vaughan, A., The Great Western's last year: efficiency in adversity. Stroud: History.
- Watts-Russell, P., ‘Travelling steam: Pascoe Grenfell and the Great Western Railway’, Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society, 217, pp. 10–20.
- Wells, A., ‘Sinking feelings: representing and resisting the Titanic disaster in Britain 1914–ca. 1960’, Journal of British Studies, 52, pp. 464–490.
- M. Whitehouse, ed., Narrow gauge steam: celebrating 150 years: Britain's legacy to the world. Stamford: Key.
- Widdowson, K., The great steam chase: the last days of steam on BR's Southern Region. Stroud: History.
- Williams, M. A., ‘The viaducts and tunnels of the Whitby-Loftus Line’, Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society, 218, pp. 33–47.
- Williams, M. A., ‘The Whitby-Loftus Line: “A more spectacular example of a loss-making branch would be hard to find”, is this really the case?’, Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society, 216, pp. 33–46.
- Wragg, D., The race to the north: rivalry and record-breaking in the golden age of steam. Barnsley: Wharncliffe Transport.
6. Money, banking, and finance
- Belenkiy, A., ‘The Master of the Royal Mint: how much money did Isaac Newton save Britain?’, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society), 176, pp. 481–498.
- Bennett, R. J., ‘Network interlocks: the connected emergence of Chambers of Commerce and provincial banks in the British Isles, 1767–1823’, Business History, 55, pp. 1288–1317.
- Berghoff, H., ‘Blending personal and managerial capitalism: Bertelsmann's rise from medium-sized publisher to global media corporation and service provider, 1950–2010’, Business History, 55, pp. 855–874.
- Bochove, C. van, ‘Configuring financial markets in preindustrial Europe’, Journal of Economic History, 73, pp. 247–278.
- Campbell, G., ‘Deriving the railway mania’, Financial History Review, 20, pp. 1–27.
- Coyle, C. and Turner, J. D., ‘Law, politics, and financial development: the great reversal of the UK corporate debt market’, Journal of Economic History, 73, pp. 810–846.
- Cuddeford, M., Coin finds in Britain: a collector's guide. Oxford: Shire.
- Deringer, W. P., ‘Finding the money: public accounting, political arithmetic, and probability in the 1690s’, Journal of British Studies, 52, pp. 638–668.
- Dodgson, J., ‘Gregory King and the economic structure of early modern England: an input–output table for 1688’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 993–1016.
- Dudley, R., ‘The failure of Burton's Bank and its aftermath’, Irish Economic and Social History, 40, pp. 1–30.
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- Flandreau, M., ‘Sovereign states, bondholders committees, and the London Stock Exchange in the nineteenth century (1827–68): new facts and old fictions’, Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 29, pp. 668–696.
- Gallais-Hamonno, G. and Rietsch, C., ‘Learning by doing: the failure of the 1697 Malt Lottery Loan’, Financial History Review, 20, pp. 259–277.
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- Grossman, R. S. and Imai, M., ‘Contingent capital and bank risk-taking among British banks before the First World War’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 132–155.
- G. Hacche and C. Taylor, eds., Inside the Bank of England: memoirs of Christopher Dow, chief economist, 1973–84. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- He, W., Paths toward the modern fiscal state: England, Japan, and China. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- Hoag, C. and Norman, S., ‘Transatlantic capital market price discovery during a financial crisis’, Bulletin of Economic Research, 65, pp. 1–9.
- Ito, S., ‘Registration and credit in seventeenth-century England’, Financial History Review, 20, pp. 137–162.
- Keyworth, J., ‘The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street’, Bank of England Quarterly Bulletin, 53, pp. 137–146.
- Knafo, S., The making of modern finance: liberal governance and the gold standard. Routledge.
- Lee, R., English history told by coins: Athelstan to Charles I (925–1649 AD). Newcastle upon Tyne: Powdene Publicity Ltd.
- McLaughlin, E., ‘A note on mutual savings and loan societies in nineteenth-century Ireland’, Irish Economic and Social History, 40, pp. 48–68.
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- McLaughlin, E., ‘An experiment in banking the poor: the Irish Mont-de-Piété, c. 1830–1850’, Financial History Review, 20, pp. 49–72.
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- Mazumder, S. and Wood, J. H., ‘The Great Deflation of 1929–33: it (almost) had to happen’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 156–177.
- Miller, R. M., ‘Financing British manufacturing multinationals in Latin America, 1930–65’, Business History, 55, pp. 818–839.
- Murphy, A. L., ‘Demanding “credible commitment”: public reaction to the failures of the early financial revolution’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 178–197.
- Naismith, R., ‘The English monetary economy, c. 973–1100: the contribution of single-finds’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 198–225.
- Nightingale, P., ‘Alien finance and the development of the English economy, 1285–1311’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 477–496.
- Nogues-Marco, P., ‘Competing bimetallic ratios: Amsterdam, London, and bullion arbitrage in mid-eighteenth century’, Journal of Economic History, 73, pp. 445–476.
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7. Local history
- Adler, D. S., A posture of defence: the story of Chatham's ‘Lines’. Lulu.
- Bahr, A., Fragments and assemblages: forming compilations of medieval London. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
- Baker, P., ‘London's liberty in chains discovered: the Levellers, the civic past, and popular protest in Civil War London’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 76, pp. 559–587.
- Ballard, L., ‘The chairs were left flat on the street: evidence of a funerary tradition in Ulster’, Folklore, 124, pp. 265–269.
- Barnfield, P., Hampton Wick the story of a Thames-side village. Part II, The nineteenth century. Borough of Twickenham Local History Society.
- Beattie, F., The Kilmarnock fact book. Stroud: Amberley.
- Borgonovo, J., The dynamics of war and revolution: Cork City, 1916–1918. Cork: Cork University Press.
- Boucher, A. R., Morriss, R. K., and Mayes, S. R., ‘An architectural analysis of the Hot Bath and Cross Bath, Bath, 1997–2003’, Post-Medieval Archaeology, 47, pp. 164–194.
- Buckley, A., ‘Poor relief in post-Reformation Camborne Parish’, Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall (2013), pp. 69–86.
- Clancy, T. O., ‘The Christmas Eve massacre, Iona, AD 986’, Innes Review, 64, pp. 66–71.
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- Clements, J., Remembered, the men on the war memorials of Witney, Crawley and Hailey. Witney: Wendy House Books Ltd.
- Cooper, N., ‘A building project for William, Lord Paget, at Burton-on-Trent’, Antiquaries Journal, 93, pp. 249–286.
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- Cosgrave, W., Monageer: past and present. County Wexford: ‘The Committee’.
- Cotton, C., ‘Enclosure of Thrussington’, Leicestershire Historian, 49, pp. 26–32.
- Cowham, C., The antiquities of Cambridgeshire. Cambridge: M. J. and V. Cowham.
- Crawford, R., On Glasgow and Edinburgh. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
- Crook, D., ‘The anatomy of a knightly homicide in rural Nottinghamshire, 1295’, Nottingham Medieval Studies Journal, 57, pp. 69–88.
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- Crook, D., ‘The Soke of Dunharn and its liberties in the twelfth and early thirteenth centuries’, Transactions of the Thoroton Society, pp. 73–86.
- Davidson, F., Glen Clova through the ages: a short guide to the history of an Angus glen. Dundee: Abertay Historical Society.
- De Wesselow, T., ‘Locating the Hereford Mappamundi’, Imago Mundi, 65, pp. 180–206.
- Devine, F., A capital in conflict: Dublin city and the 1913 Lockout. Dublin: Dublin City Council.
- Downing, A., ‘The “Sheffield Outrages”: violence, class and trade unionism, 1850–1870’, Social History, 38, pp. 162–182.
- Drake, S. J., ‘Politics and society in Richard II's Cornwall: a study in relations between centre and locality’, Journal of the Royal Institution of Cornwall (2013), pp. 23–49.
- Drinkall, M., The Leeds book of days. Stroud: History.
- Driver, T., Architecture, regional identity and power in the Iron Age landscapes of mid Wales: the hillforts of North Ceredigion. Oxford: Archaeopress.
- Durney, J., The War of Independence in Kildare. Cork: Mercier Press.
- Eales, J., ‘Female literacy and the social identity of the clergy family in the seventeenth century’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 133, pp. 67–82.
- Evans, J., The Gloucester book of days. Stroud: History.
- Ferguson, N., The Glasgow book of days. Stroud: History.
- Finlay, J., Footsteps through Wicklow's past: a history of Wicklow town and its environs from the earliest times to the end of the civil war and beyond. Wicklow: John Finlay.
- Foster, A., A chain of mayors: the mayors of Chichester (1239–2013), with portraits and brief biographies. Chichester: University of Chichester.
- Gerrard, T. and Weedon, A., ‘The “lower classes are very hard readers”: Kidderminster Municipal Library 1855–1856’, Library and Information History, 29, pp. 81–102.
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- Glennon, K., From pogrom to civil war: Tom Glennon and the Belfast IRA. Cork: Mercier Press.
- Greenlees, J., ‘ “For the convenience and comfort of the persons employed by them”: the Lowell Corporation Hospital, 1840–1930’, Medical History, 57, pp. 45–64.
- Grove-White, R., ‘Anglesey Sheriffs past and present’, Anglesey Antiquarian Society and Field Club Transactions (2012), pp. 9–20.
- Hasted, M., The Cheltenham book of days. Stroud: History.
- Hay, R., How an island lost its people: improvement, clearance and resettlement on Lismore, 1830–1914. South Lochs, Isle of Lewis: Islands Book Trust.
- Heathorn, S., ‘Aesthetic politics and heritage nostalgia: electrical generating superstations in the London cityscape since 1927’, London Journal, 38, pp. 125–150.
- Heimann, M., ‘Mysticism in Bootle: Victorian supernaturalism as an historical problem’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 64, pp. 335–356.
- M. Henig and C. Paine, eds., Preserving and presenting the past in Oxfordshire and beyond: essays in memory of John Rhodes. Oxford: Archaeopress.
- Henstock, A. and Allen P., ‘Bingham Hall and the Porter family: a new interpretation of the “deserted ,edieval village” at Crow Close, Bingham, Nottinghamshire’, Transactions of the Thoroton Society, 116, pp. 95–116.
- Hill, N., ‘Hall and chambers: Oakham Castle reconsidered’, Antiquaries Journal, 93, pp. 163–216.
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- Hunt, A., More murder and mayhem around the Chase. Hednesford: Mount Chase Press.
- Hurley, M. F., ‘Children and youth in medieval and post-medieval Cork and Waterford’, Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society, 118, pp. 71–85.
- Johnson, M. S., ‘New light on the development of Beverley Minster’, Journal of the British Archaeological Association, 166, pp. 31–50.
- Jones, I., ‘Ulster's early medieval houses’, Medieval Archaeology, 57, pp. 212–222.
- Jones, P. M., ‘The Diocese of St Asaph on the eve of the Great War’, Transactions of the Denbighshire Historical Society, 61, pp. 103–114.
- Kaika, M., ‘Architecture and crisis: re-inventing the icon, re-imag(in)ing London and re-branding the City’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 35 (2010), pp. 453–474.
- N. Karn, ed., Ely, 1198–1256. Oxford: Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press.
- L. Kennedy and P. Ollerenshaw, eds., Ulster since 1600: politics, economy, and society. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Leahy, K., ‘A deposit of early medieval iron object from Scraptoft, Leicestershire’, Medieval Archaeology, 57, pp. 223–237.
- Longley, D., ‘Penmon re-visited: the building sequence of Penmon Church’, Anglesey Antiquarian Society and Field Club Transactions (2012), pp. 75–86.
- Loriol, P., The London book of days. Stroud: History.
- J. Mac Laughlin and S. Beattie, eds., An historical, environmental and cultural atlas of County Donegal. Cork: Cork University Press.
- McIntosh, M., Poor relief and community in Hadleigh, Suffolk, 1547–1600. Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press.
- McKellar, E., Landscapes of London: the city, the country and the suburbs, 1660–1840. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- McKinstry, S. and Ding, Y., ‘Alex Cowan & Sons Ltd. Papermakers, Penicuik: a Scottish case of Weber's Protestant work ethic’, Business History, 55, pp. 721–739.
- McNiven, P., ‘Spittal place-names in Menteith and Strathendrick: evidence of crusading endowments?’, Innes Review, 64, pp. 23–38.
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- Manors to Manitoba: and other tales of old Eydon. Eydon: Eydon Historical Research Group.
- Marchbank, A., Upper Annandale: its history and traditions (1901). Kilkerran: Grimsay Press.
- Margham, J., ‘Early medieval meeting places in an island landscape’, Proceedings of the Isle of Wight Natural History and Archaeological Society, 27, pp. 5–26.
- Martin, A., Kintyre places and place-names. Kilkerran: Grimsay Press.
- Maude, A., ‘The changing image of London: a comparison of the Crace Collection and the Crowle Pennant in the British Museum Print Room’, London Journal, 38, pp. 110–124.
- Mays, S., The only way was Essex. Abacus.
- Mees, K., ‘From the sublime to the druidical: changing perceptions of prehistoric monuments in southern Anglesey in the post-medieval period’, Post-Medieval Archaeology, 47, pp. 222–246.
- Mercer, J., Sidcup & Foots Cray: a history. Stroud: Amberley.
- Morris, R.J., ‘White Horse Close: philanthropy, Scottish historical imagination and the re-building of Edinburgh in the later nineteenth century’, Journal of Scottish Historical Studies, 33, pp. 101–119.
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- Morrison, S., ‘Fee trees and rogue verderers in early eighteenth century Sherwood Forest’, Transactions of the Thoroton Society, 117, pp. 97–108.
- Ó Suilleabháin, M., Where mountainy men have sown: war and peace in rebel Cork in the turbulent years, 1916–21. Cork: Mercier Press.
- Osborne, M., Defending Essex: the military landscape from prehistory to the present. Stroud: History.
- Oswald, A., Wharram Percy: deserted medieval village. English Heritage.
- Ovenden, T., ‘The Cobbs of Margate: evangelicalism and anti-slavery in the Isle of Thanet, 1787–2834’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 133, pp. 1–32.
- Parsons, D., ‘All Saints Church, Brixworth, Northamptonshire: the development of the fabric c. 1100 to 1865’, Journal of the British Archaeological Association, 166, pp. 1–30.
- Pellett, I., ‘The medieval misericords of Kent's parish churches’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 133, pp. 185–214.
- Perring, S., ‘Reformation of the English cathedral landscape: negotiating change in York Minster Close c. 1500–1642’, World Archaeology, 45, pp. 186–205.
- D. T. W. Price, ed., Shropshire history and archaeology. Shrewsbury: Shropshire Archaeological and Historical Society.
- Pridgeon, E., ‘National and international trends in Hampshire churches: a chronology of St Christopher wall painting (c. 1240–1530)’, Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society, 68, pp. 64–84.
- Redfern, B., The gallows tree: crime and punishment in the eighteenth century: Northumberland and Berwick-upon-Tweed. Newcastle upon Tyne: Tyne Bridge.
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- Smith, J. F. H., ‘William Stukeley in Stamford: his houses, gardens and a project for a Palladian triumphal arch over Barn Hill’, Antiquaries Journal, 93, pp. 353–400.
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- Sumner, J., ‘Walls of resonance: institutional history and the buildings of the University of Manchester’, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 44, pp. 700–715.
- Tatton-Brown, T., Lepine, D., and Saul, N., ‘ “Incomparabilissime fabrice”: the archaeological history of Salisbury Cathedral c. 1297–1548’, Journal of the British Archaeological Association, 166, pp. 51–98.
- Thomas, G., ‘Life before the minster: the social dynamics of monastic foundation at Anglo-Saxon Lyminge, Kent’, Antiquaries Journal, 93, pp. 109–145.
- Thomas, S. S., Creating communities in Restoration England: parish and congregation in Oliver Heywood's Halifax. Leiden: Brill.
- Thompson, S., Literary Putney and its environs, 17th–21st century. Wandsworth Historical Society in association with the Putney Society.
- M. A. Timoney, ed., Dedicated to Sligo: thirty-four essays on Sligo's past. Ballymote: Publishing Sligo's Past.
- Turk, M. E., ‘Workers' housing at Portlaw, County Waterford, Ireland—an assessment’, Industrial Archaeology Review, 35, pp. 100–110.
- Turner, J., ‘ “Ill-favoured sluts”?—the disorderly women of Rosemary Lane and Rag Fair’, London Journal, 38, pp. 95–109.
- R. Turner, ed., Morden in 1910: the land valuation records (‘Lloyd George's Domesday’). Merton Historical Society.
- Tweedale, G., ‘Backstreet capitalism: an analysis of the family firm in the nineteenth-century Sheffield cutlery industry’, Business History, 55, pp. 875–891.
- Webb, S., The Colchester book of days. Stroud: History.
- Whittick, B., Memories of Morden between the wars. Morden: Merton Historical Society.
- Willmott, H. and Bryson, A., ‘Changing to suit the times: a post-Dissolution history of Monk Bretton Priory, South Yorkshire’, Post-Medieval Archaeology, 47, pp. 136–163.
- Wilson, T., ‘The history of Black Mill, St Martins Hill, Canterbury’, Archaeologia Cantiana, 133, pp. 277–290.
- Wiseman, J., Havera: the story of an island. Lerwick: Shetland Amenity Trust.
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8. Demography
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- T. Brinkmann, ed., Points of passage: Jewish transmigrants from eastern Europe in Scandinavia, Germany, and Britain 1880–1914. New York: Berghahn Books.
- Brooks, J., Why we left: untold stories and songs of America's first immigrants. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
- Calder, J., Lost in the backwoods: Scots and the North American wilderness. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
- Casson, M., ‘The determinants of local population growth: a study of Oxfordshire in the nineteenth century’, Explorations in Economic History, 50, pp. 28–45.
- Claffey, A., Irish Manchester revisited. Stroud: History.
- DeWitte, S. and Slavin, P., ‘Between famine and death: England on the eve of the Black Death—evidence from paleoepidemiology and manorial accounts’, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 44, pp. 37–60.
- Elton, B. J., ‘In the islands of the sea: geography in the religious history of the Jews of Britain’, Jewish Journal of Sociology, 55, pp. 91–113.
- M. Farr and X. Guégan, eds., The British abroad since the eighteenth century, 1: Travellers and tourists. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Fotheringham, A. S., Kelly, M. H., and Charlton, M., ‘The demographic impacts of the Irish famine: towards a greater geographical understanding’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 38, pp. 221–237.
- Goldstein, M., Jews in Britain. Oxford: Shire.
- Hinton, D. A., ‘Demography: from Domesday and beyond’, Journal of Medieval History, 39, pp. 146–178.
- Horrell, S. and Oxley, D., ‘Bargaining for basics? Inferring decision making in nineteenth-century British households from expenditure, diet, stature, and death’, European Review of Economic History, 17, pp. 147–170.
- Kabachnik, P. and Ryder, A., ‘Nomadism and the 2003 Anti-Social Behaviour Act: constraining Gypsy and Traveller mobilities in Britain’, Romani Studies, 23, pp. 83–106.
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- Manz, S. and Panayi, P., Refugees and cultural transfer to Britain. Routledge.
- Ó Gráda, C., Eating people is wrong: famine's darkest secret? Belfield: UCD School of Economics, University College Dublin.
- Salamońska, T., New mobilities in Europe: Polish migration to Ireland post-2004. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
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- Schneider, E. B., ‘Real wages and the family: adjusting real wages to changing demography in pre-modern England’, Explorations in Economic History, 50, pp. 99–115.
- Sprio, M., Migrant memories: cultural history, cinema and the Italian post-war diaspora in Britain. Oxford: Peter Lang.
- Stammers, M., Emigrant clippers to Australia: the Black Ball Line, its operation, people and ships 1852–1871. Barnoldswick: Milepost Research.
- Walsham, A., ‘The reformation of the generations: youth, age, and religious change in England, c. 1500–1700’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 6th ser., 21, pp. 93–121.
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9. Social structure and the family
- Andrew, D. T., Aristocratic vice: the attack on duelling, suicide, adultery, and gambling in eighteenth-century England. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- A. August, ed., The urban working class in Britain, 1830–1914. Pickering & Chatto.
- Bailey, J. and Giese, L., ‘Marital cruelty: reconsidering lay attitudes in England, c. 1580 to 1850’, History of the Family, 18, pp. 289–305.
- Black, C., An intriguing life: a memoir of war, Washington, and marriage to an American spymaster. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
- Blaydes, L. and Chaney, E., ‘The feudal revolution and Europe's rise: political divergence of the Christian West and the Muslim world before 1500CE’, American Political Science Review, 107, pp. 16–34.
- Boyle, D., Broke: who killed the middle classes? Fourth Estate.
- Butler, S., Divorce in medieval England: from one to two persons in law. Abingdon: Routledge.
- Campbell, S., The season: a summer whirl through the English social season. Aurum.
- Cocks, H., ‘The cost of marriage and the matrimonial agency in late Victorian Britain’, Social History, 38, pp. 66–88.
- Cullum, P., ‘ “Give me chastity”: masculinity and attitudes to chastity and celibacy in the middle ages’, Gender and History, 25, pp. 621–636.
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- Cummins, D., ‘The social significance of tithes in eighteenth-century England’, English Historical Review, 128, pp. 1129–1154.
- Cust, R., Charles I and the aristocracy, 1625–1642. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Dawson, H., Frank Renner's bairns: looking at the world through the lives of a Northumbrian family. Newcastle upon Tyne: Powdene Publicity Ltd.
- Day, C. and Smith, M., ‘Cousin marriage in south-western England in the nineteenth century’, Journal of Biosocial Science, 45, pp. 405–414.
- Flather, A. J., ‘Space, place, and gender: the sexual and spatial division of labor in the early modern household’, History and Theory, 52, pp. 344–360.
- Fletcher, C., The divorce of Henry VIII: the untold story. Vintage.
- Foyster, E., ‘The “new world of children” reconsidered: child abduction in late eighteenth and early nineteenth century England’, Journal of British Studies, 52, pp. 669–692.
- Frost, G. S., ‘Claiming justice: paternity affiliation in South Wales, 1870–1900’, Rural History, 24, pp. 177–198.
- Frost, G., ‘Under the guardians' supervision: illegitimacy, family, and the English poor law, 1870–1930’, Journal of Family History, 38, pp. 122–139.
- Ganz, M., ‘Clandestine schemes: Burney's Cecelia and the Marriage Act’, Eighteenth Century Theory and Interpretation, 54, pp. 25–51.
- Goodrich, A., ‘Understanding a language of “aristocracy”, 1700–1850’, Historical Journal, 56, pp. 369–398.
- Green, A., ‘Intergenerational family stories: private, parochial, pathological?’, Journal of Family History, 38, pp. 387–402.
- Griffin, E., ‘Sex, illegitimacy and social change in industrializing Britain’, Social History, 38, pp. 139–161.
- Hamlin, C., ‘Nuisances and community in mid-Victorian England: the attractions of inspection’, Social History, 38, pp. 346–379.
- Handley, S., ‘Sociable sleeping in early modern England, 1660–1760’, History, 98, pp. 79–104.
- Herzog, D., Household politics: conflict in early modern England. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- Hopper, A., ‘Social mobility during the English Revolution: the case of Adam Eyre’, Social History, 38, pp. 26–45.
- Jackman, J., ‘Goldrood’: the history of a Quaker family. Abernant Publishing.
- Jackson, C., ‘Memory and the construction and experience of elite masculinity in the seventeenth-century autobiography of Lord Herbert of Cherbury’, Gender and History, 25, pp. 107–131.
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- M. C. Jacob and C. Secretan, eds., In praise of ordinary people: early modern Britain and the Dutch Republic. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Klemp, M., Minns, C., Wallis, P., and Weisdorf, J., ‘Picking winners? The effect of birth order and migration on parental human capital investments in pre-modern England’, European Review of Economic History, 17, pp. 210–232.
- Lambrecht, T., ‘English individualism and continental altruism? Servants, remittances, and family welfare in eighteenth-century rural Europe’, European Review of Economic History, 17, pp. 190–209.
- Leong, E., ‘Collecting knowledge for the family: recipes, gender, and practical knowledge in the early modern English household’, Centaurus, 55, pp. 81–103.
- Lieberman, M., ‘L'introduction des moeurs chevaleresques au pays de Galles’, Cahiers de civilization médiévales, 56, pp. 137–150.
- Long, J., ‘The surprising social mobility of Victorian Britain’, European Review of Economic History, 17, pp. 1–23.
- Maldonado, A., ‘Burial in early medieval Scotland: new questions’, Medieval Archaeology, 57.
- Merryweather, K., Irish family history. volume three. Ireland: Irish Ancestors 4U Ltd.
- Moore, W., How to create the perfect wife. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
- Muir, A., ‘Illegitimacy in eighteenth-century Wales’, Welsh History Review, 26, pp. 351–388.
- Murdoch, A., ‘Hector McAllister in North Carolina, Argyll and Arran: family and memory in return migration to Scotland in the eighteenth century’, Journal of Scottish Historical Studies, 33, pp. 1–19.
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- Pooley, S., ‘Parenthood, child-rearing and fertility in England, 1850–1914’, History of the Family, 18, pp. 83–106.
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- Rico, M., Nature's noblemen: transatlantic masculinities and the nineteenth-century American West. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- Rugg, J., ‘Constructing the grave: competing burial ideals in nineteenth century England’, Social History, 38, pp. 328–345.
- Schutte, K., ‘Marrying out in the sixteenth century: subsequent marriages of aristocratic women in the Tudor era’, Journal of Family History, 38, pp. 3–16.
- Simonelli, D., Working class heroes: rock music and British society in the 1960s and 1970s. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
- Strange, J.-M., ‘Fatherhood, furniture and the inter-personal dynamics of working-class homes, c. 1870–1914’, Urban History, 40, pp. 271–286.
- Sutton, A., ‘ “Serious money”: the benefits of marriage in London, 1400–1499’, London Journal, 38, pp. 1–17.
- Toman, J., Kilvert's world of wonders: growing up in mid-Victorian England. Cambridge: Lutterworth.
- Urquhart, D., ‘Ireland and the Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Act of 1857’, Journal of Family History, 38, pp. 301–320.
- Ward, S., ‘Drifting into manhood and womanhood: courtship, marriage and gender among young adults in south Wales and the north-west of England in the 1930s’, Welsh History Review, 26, pp. 623–648.
- Warren, I., Esquires, gentlemen and misters in seventeenth-century Worcestershire. Worcester: Worcestershire Historical Society.
- Wilson, A., Ritual and conflict: the social relations of childbirth in early modern England. Farnham: Ashgate.
10. Labour conditions and organizations
- Blackshaw, T., Working-class life in northern England, 1945–2010: the pre-history and after-life of the inbetweener generation. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Blayney, P. W. M., The Stationers' Company and the printers of London, 1501–1557. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Böheim, R. and Zweimüller, M., ‘The employment of temporary agency workers in the UK: for or against the trade unions?’, Economica, 80, 317, pp. 65–95.
- Cohn, S. K., Popular protest in late medieval English towns. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Devinatz, V. G., ‘A Cold War thaw in the International Working Class Movement? The World Federation of Trade Unions and the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions, 1967–1977’, Science and Society, 77, pp. 342–371.
- Falke, C., Literature by the working class: English autobiographies, 1820–1848. Amherst, NY: Cambria Press.
- Farrė, L. and Vella, F., ‘The intergenerational transmission of gender role attitudes and its implications for female labour force participation’, Economica, 80, pp. 219–247.
- Field, J. F., ‘Domestic service, gender, and wages in rural England, c. 1700–1860’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 249–272.
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- Griffin, E., Liberty's dawn: a people's history of the Industrial Revolution. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- Haines, R., ‘Quantifying the crews: seafaring labour at Swansea, 1838–1903’, Welsh History Review, 26, pp. 560–596.
- Harris, G., The Ferndale Colliery disasters: 1867 & 1869. Pontypridd: Coalopolis Publishing.
- Heal, C., ‘Alcohol, madness, and a glimmer of anthrax: disease among the felt hatters in the nineteenth century’, Textile History, 44, pp. 95–119.
- Hout, M. and Guest, A. M., ‘Intergenerational occupational mobility in Great Britain and the United States since 1850: comment’, American Economic Review, 103, pp. 2021–2040.
- Humphries, J., ‘Childhood and child labour in the British industrial revolution’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 395–418.
- Laidlaw, P., ‘Jews in the British Isles in 1851: occupations’, Jewish Journal of Sociology, 55, pp. 114–157.
- Lethbridge, L., Servants: a downstairs view of twentieth-century Britain. Bloomsbury.
- Llywelyn, J., Remember Senghenydd: the colliery disaster of 1913. Llanrwst: Gwasg Carreg Gwalch.
- Long, J. and Ferrie, J., ‘Intergenerational occupational mobility in Great Britain and the United States since 1850: reply’, American Economic Review, 103, pp. 2041–2049.
- Long, J. and Ferrie, J., ‘Intergenerational occupational mobility in Great Britain and the United States since 1850’, American Economic Review, 103, pp. 1109–1137.
- McDowell, L., Working lives: gender, migration and employment in Britain, 1945–2007. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell.
- McGuire, C., Clarke, L., and Wall, C., ‘Battles on the Barbican: the struggle for trade unionism in the British building industry, 1965–7’, History Workshop Journal, 75, pp. 33–57.
- McIvor, A., Working lives: work in Britain since 1945. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- McSheffrey, S., ‘Stranger artisans and the London sanctuary of St Martin Le Grand in the reign of Henry VIII’, Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 43, pp. 545–571.
- Malanima, P., ‘When did England overtake Italy? Medieval and early modern divergence in prices and wages’, European Review of Economic History, 17, pp. 45–70.
- Mates, L., ‘The limits and potential of syndicalist influence in the Durham coalfield before the Great War’, Labor History, 54, pp. 42–63.
- Minns, C. and Wallis, P., ‘The price of human capital in a pre-industrial economy: premiums and apprenticeship contracts in 18th century England’, Explorations in Economic History, 50, pp. 335–350.
- Naidu, S. and Yuchtman, N., ‘Coercive contract enforcement: law and the labor market in nineteenth century industrial Britain’, American Economic Review, 103, pp. 107–144.
- Nuttall, J., ‘Pluralism, the people, and time in Labour Party history, 1931–1964’, Historical Journal, 56, pp. 729–756.
- Pappano, M. A. and Rice, N. R., ‘Medieval and early modern artisan culture’, Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 43, pp. 473–485.
- Pincombe, I., ‘Kings and queens of Rexville: the recreational culture of G. F. Lovell & Co., 1893–1970’, Welsh History Review, 26, pp. 597–622.
- Pionke, A. D., The ritual culture of Victorian professionals: competing for ceremonial status, 1838–1877. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Quinlan, M., ‘Precarious and hazardous work: the health and safety of merchant seamen 1815–1935’, Social History, 38, pp. 281–307.
- Redvaidsen, D., ‘The Eugenics Society's outreach to the labour movement in Britain, 1907–1945’, Labour History Review, 78, pp. 301–329.
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- Robertson, M., Rhythms of labour: music at work in Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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- Xie, Y. and Killewald, A., ‘Intergenerational occupational mobility in Great Britain and the United States since 1850: comment’, American Economic Review, 103, pp. 2003–2020.
11. Religion and education
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- Archer, M. S., Social origins of educational systems. Abingdon: Routledge.
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- Atherstone, A., ‘Evangelicals and the Oxford Movement centenary’, Journal of Religious History, 37, pp. 98–117.
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- MacDonald, I., Clerics and clansmen: the Diocese of Argyll between the twelfth and sixteenth centuries. Boston: Brill.
- McCall, B., Baal's priests: the loyalist clergy and the English Revolution. Farnham: Ashgate.
- McCall, F., ‘Children of Baal: clergy families and their memories of sequestration during the English Civil War’, Huntington Library Quarterly, 76, pp. 617–638.
- McClain, L., ‘Troubled consciences: new understandings and performances of penance among Catholics in Protestant England’, Church History, 82, pp. 90–124.
- McCoog, T., ‘And touching our society’: fashioning Jesuit identity in Elizabethan England. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.
- McKernan, J. A., ‘The origins of critical theory in education: Fabian socialism as social reconstructionism in nineteenth-century Britain’, British Journal of Educational Studies, 61, pp. 417–433.
- Malo, R., Relics and writing in late medieval England. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
- Marsh, P. T., Faith in the inner city: a history of St Alban's School and Academy. Studley: Brewin Books.
- Matar, N., ‘The English merchant and the Moroccan Sufi: Messianism and Mahdism in the early seventeenth century’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 65, pp. 47–65.
- N. Mears and A. Ryrie, eds., Worship and the parish church in early modern Britain. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Mews, C. J., ‘The flight of Carthach (Mochuda) from Rahan to Lismore: lineage and identity in early medieval Ireland’, Early Medieval Europe, 21, pp. 1–26.
- Mills, S., ‘ “An instruction in good citizenship”: scouting and the historical geographies of citizenship education’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 38, pp. 120–134.
- Mutch, A., ‘ “Shared Protestantism” and British identity: contrasting Church governance practices in eighteenth-century Scotland and England’, Social History, 38, pp. 456–476.
- Olumuyiwa, O., A history of Anglican/Methodist collaboration in Nigeria within the Yoruba socio-cultural context. Oxford: Peter Lang.
- Orme, N., The minor clergy of Exeter Cathedral: biographies, 1250–1548 (Devon and Cornwall Record Society, 54).
- Page, S., Magic in the cloister: pious motives, illicit interests, and occult approaches to the medieval universe. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press.
- Paris, P., Orkney's Italian Chapel: the true story of an icon. Edinburgh: Black & White Publishing.
- Paterson, D., ‘A push from the centre: the nineteenth-century transformation of Warwickshire grammar schools’, Warwickshire History Journal, XV, 4, pp. 152–170.
- Pearce, J., Contextual archaeology of burial practice: case studies from Roman Britain. Oxford: Archaeopress.
- Persoff, M., Hats in the ring: choosing Britain's chief rabbis from Adler to Sacks. Boston, MA: Academic Studies Press.
- Pietsch, T., Empire of scholars: universities, networks and the British academic world, 1850–1939. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
- Podmore, R., Maiden, mother and queen: Mary in the Anglican tradition. Norwich: Canterbury.
- Poleg, E., ‘The earliest evidence for anti-Lollard polemics in medieval Scotland’, Innes Review, 64, pp. 227–234.
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- M. C. Potter, ed., The concept of the ‘Master’ in art education in Britain and Ireland, 1770 to the present. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing Company.
- Prögler, D., English students at Leiden University, 1575–1650: ‘advancing your abilities in learning and bettering your understanding of the world and state affairs’. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Pub. Co.
- Pulliam, H., ‘Beasts of the desert: marginalia in the Book of Deer’, Medieval Archaeology, 57, pp. 83–110.
- Ribbins, P. and Sherratt, B., ‘The permanent secretary as policy-maker, shaper, taker, sharer, and resister in education—reflections on Sir James Hamilton as a centralizing outsider’, Journal of Educational Administration and History, 45, pp. 28–48.
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- Ritari, K., ‘The Irish eschatological tale The two deaths and its sources’, Traditio, 68, pp. 125–151.
- Ritchie, D., ‘Radical orthodoxy: Irish Covenanters and American slavery, circa 1830–1865’, Church History, 82, pp. 812–847.
- Rodwell, W., The Coronation Chair and Stone of Scone: history, archaeology and conservation. Oxford: Oxbow Books.
- Rose, M., Decter, M., Robinson, S., Jack, S., and Lockett, N., ‘Opportunities, contradictions, and attitudes: the evolution of university–business engagement since 1960’, Business History, 55, pp. 259–279.
- Ryrie, A., Being Protestant in Reformation Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Sell, A., The theological education of the ministry: soundings in the British Reformed and dissenting traditions. Eugene, OR: Pickwick Publications.
- Shaw, P. A., ‘Adapting the Roman alphabet for writing Old English: evidence from coin epigraphy and single-sheet charters’, Early Medieval Europe, 21, pp. 115–139.
- Shoulson, J., Fictions of conversion: Jews, Christians, and cultures of change in early modern England. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press.
- Siew-Min, S., ‘Educating multicultural citizens: colonial nationalism, imperial citizenship, and education in late colonial Singapore’, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 44, pp. 49–73.
- Small, J., Piety and politics in Britain, 14th–15th centuries: the essays of John A. F. Thomson. Farnham: Ashgate Variorum.
- Smith, D. N., ‘Academics, the “cultural third mission” and the BBC: forgotten histories of knowledge creation, transformation and impact’, Studies in Higher Education, 38, pp. 663–677.
- M. Snape and E. Madigan, eds., The clergy in khaki: new perspectives on British Army chaplaincy in the First World War. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Sowerby, S., Making toleration: the repealers and the Glorious Revolution. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- Spencer, A. E. C. W., Broken faith: the demography of a church tearing itself apart. Taunton: Russell-Spencer Ltd.
- Stephen, J., Defending the revolution: the Church of Scotland 1689–1716. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Sugg, R., The smoke of the soul: medicine, physiology and religion in early modern England. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Swift, D., Shakespeare's common prayers: the Book of Common Prayer and the Elizabethan age. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Taliadoros, J., ‘Law, theology, and morality: conceptions of the rights to relief of the poor in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries’, Journal of Religious History, 37, pp. 474–493.
- Tallis, L., ‘Literacy, magic and “superstition” in nineteenth-century Wales: the example of Dic Aberdaron’, Welsh History Review, 26, pp. 389–422.
- Thomas, D., ‘The pastoral ministry of Thomas Hall (1610–1665) in the English Revolution’, Midland History, 38, pp. 169–193.
- J. D. Vann and R. T. VanArsdel, eds., Victorian periodicals and Victorian society. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
- Villani, S., ‘From Mary Queen of Scots to the Scottish Capuchins: Scotland as a symbol of Protestant persecution in seventeenth-century Italian literature’, Innes Review, 64, pp. 100–119.
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- Villis, T., British Catholics and fascism: religious identity and political extremism between the wars. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Visscher, E., Reading the rabbis: Christian Hebraism in the works of Herbert of Bosham. Boston: Brill.
- Walker, C., Reason and religion in late seventeenth-century England: the politics and theology of radical dissent. I. B. Tauris.
- Walker, M., ‘ “For the last many years in England everybody has been educating the people, but they have forgotten to find them any books”: the Mechanics Institutes Library Movement and its contribution to working class adult education during the nineteenth century’, Library and Information History, 29, pp. 272–286.
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- M. J. Walton, ed., Huddled together: 50 years of Hull University Drama Department/former Drama students. Hull: Barbican Press.
- Watkins, A., A village headmaster: John Davies (1851–1942): Trelewis: head of Bontnewydd Board School which became Trelewis Mixed School 1882–1913. Gelligaer: Gelligaer Publishing.
- Webb, S., The best days of our lives: school life in post-war Britain. Stroud: History.
- Weller, V., ‘ “My trust to be saved”: religious change in north-east Warwickshire through testamentary evidence’, Warwickshire History Journal, XV, 5, pp. 185–203.
- West, A. and Bailey, E., ‘The development of the academic programme: privatising school-based education in England 1986–2013’, British Journal of Educational Studies, 61, pp. 417–433.
- Whan, R., The Presbyterians of Ulster, 1680–1730. Woodbridge: Boydell.
- Williamson, P., ‘National days of prayer: the churches, the state and public worship in Britain, 1899–1957’, English Historical Review, 128, pp. 323–366.
- J. M. W. Willoughby, ed., The libraries of collegiate churches. The British Library in association with the British Academy.
- Wright, D. C. H., The Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music: a social and cultural history. Woodbridge: Boydell.
- Yamamoto-Wilson, J., Pain, pleasure and perversity: discourses of suffering in seventeenth-century England. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Young, F., English Catholics and the supernatural, 1553–1829. Farnham: Ashgate.
12. Science, technology, and medicine
- A. Adamson, J. K. Davies, and I. E. I. Robson, eds., Thirty years of astronomical discovery with UKIRT: the scientific achievement of the United Kingdom infrared telescope. Dordrecht: Springer.
- Agar, J., ‘Sacrificial experts? Science, senescence, and saving the British nuclear project’, History of Science, 51, pp. 63–84.
- Arapostathis, S., ‘Electrical innovations, authority and consulting expertise in late Victorian Britain’, Notes and Records of the Royal Society, 67, pp. 59–76.
- Arapostathis, S., ‘Meters, patents, and expertise(s): knowledge networks in the electricity meters industry, 1880–1914’, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 44, pp. 234–246.
- Arnold, D., The spaces of the hospital: spatiality and urban change in London 1680–1820. Routledge.
- Barrell, J., Edward Pugh of Ruthin (1763–1813): a native artist. Cardiff: University of Wales Press.
- Bassiri, N., ‘The brain and the unconscious soul in eighteenth-century nervous physiology: Robert Whytt's Sensorium Commune’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 74, pp. 425–448.
- Bates, V., ‘ “So far as I can define without a microscopical examination”: venereal disease diagnosis in English courts, 1850–1914’, Social History of Medicine, 26, pp. 38–55.
- Baxfield, C. R. C., ‘ “To mend the scheme of Providence”: Benjamin Franklin's electrical heterodoxy’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 179–197.
- Berkowitz, C., ‘Systems of display: the making of anatomical knowledge in Enlightenment Britain’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 359–387.
- Berrios, G. E., ‘Forbes Winslow and his Journal’, History of Psychiatry, 24, pp. 492–501.
- Berry, W., The pre-dreadnought revolution: developing the bulwarks of sea power. Stroud: History.
- Biddle, R., ‘ “As his was not a surgical case it was not my Duty to attend him”: the surgeon's role in the nineteenth-century royal dockyards’, Medical History, 57, pp. 559–578.
- Bilak, D., ‘Alchemy and the end times: revelations from the laboratory and library of John Allin, Puritan alchemist (1623–1683)’, Ambix, 60, pp. 390–414.
- Bivins, R., ‘Coming “home” to (post)colonial medicine: treating tropical bodies in post-war Britain’, Social History of Medicine, 26, pp. 1–20.
- Bowler, P. J., ‘Popular science magazines in interwar Britain: authors and readerships’, Science in Context, 26, pp. 437–457.
- D. Brennan, ed., Irish insanity 1800–2000. Routledge.
- Briggs, G., Cracking the Luftwaffe codes: the secrets of Bletchley Park. Barnsley: Frontline.
- Brock, C., ‘Risk, responsibility and surgery in the 1890s and early 1900s’, Medical History, 57, pp. 317–337.
- Bud, R., ‘Life, DNA and the model’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 311–334.
- Carr, M. A., ‘Thermodynamic analysis of a Newcomen steam engine’, International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology, 83, pp. 187–208.
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- Chamberland, C., ‘From apprentice to master: social disciplining and surgical education in early modern London, 1570–1640’, History of Education Quarterly, 53, pp. 21–44.
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- Corfield, B., ‘Thomas Newcomen the man’, International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology, 83, pp. 209–221.
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- Cowles, H. M., ‘A Victorian extinction: Alfred Newton and the evolution of animal protection?’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 695–714.
- Curth, L., ‘A plaine and easie waie to remedie a horse’: equine medicine in early modern England. Leiden: Brill.
- Dawson, M. S., ‘Astrology and human variation in early modern England’, Historical Journal, 56, pp. 31–53.
- Deb, R., ‘Quinine, mosquitoes, and Empire: reassembling malaria in British India, 1890–1910’, South Asian History and Culture, 4, pp. 65–86.
- Dennis, M., The longbow. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.
- Dennis, S., The Martini-Henry rifle. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.
- Dixon, J., ‘ “Dark ecstasies”: sex, mysticism and psychology in early twentieth-century England’, Gender and History, 25, pp. 652–667.
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- Dunkeld, M., One Great George Street: the headquarters building of the Institution of Civil Engineers. Dunbeath: Whittles Publishing.
- Durbach, N., ‘ “Skinless wonders”: body worlds and the Victorian freak show’, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 69, pp. 33–67.
- Ellis, R., ‘Asylums and sport: participation, isolation and the role of cricket in the treatment of the insane’, International Journal of the History of Sport, 30, pp. 83–101.
- Eriksen, A., ‘Cure or protection? The meaning of smallpox inoculation, ca. 1750–1775’, Medical History, 57, pp. 516–536.
- Erlingsson, S. J., ‘Institutions and innovation: experimental zoology and the creation of the British Journal of Experimental Biology, and the Society for Experimental Biology’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 73–95.
- Ferlie, E., Making wicked problems governable?: the case of managed networks in health care. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Galenson, D. W. and Pope, C. L., ‘Experimental and conceptual innovators in the sciences: the cases of Darwin and Einstein’, Historical Methods, 46, pp. 102–112.
- Gay, H., The Silwood circle: a history of ecology and the making of scientific careers in late twentieth-century Britain. Imperial College Press.
- Gooday, G., ‘Electrical technoscience and physics in transition, 1880–1920’, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 44, pp. 202–211.
- Gooday, S., Patently contestable: electrical technologies and inventor identities on trial in Britain. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
- Guicciardini, N., ‘The role of musical analogies in Newton's optical and cosmological work’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 74, pp. 45–67.
- Hardy, A., ‘Scientific strategy and ad hoc response: the problem of typhoid in America and England, c. 1910–50’, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 69, pp. 3–37.
- Harris, M., Farquhar, F., Healy, D., Le Noury, J. C., Linden, S. C., Hughes, J. A., and Roberts, A. P., ‘The morbidity and mortality linked to melancholia: two cohorts compared, 1875–1924 and 1995–2005’, History of Psychiatry, 24, pp. 3–14.
- Heaton-Ward, D., Mental handicap: the shifting sands a collection of papers 1950–2001. Bristol: Friends of Glenside Hospital Museum.
- Heffernan, M. and Jöns, H., ‘Research travel and disciplinary identities in the University of Cambridge, 1885–1955’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 255–286.
- Heggie, V., ‘Experimental physiology, Everest and oxygen: from the ghastly kitchens to the gasping lung’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 123–147.
- Helm, D., ‘ “The beauty of a sick room”: family care for the dying in the English upper and middle class home, c. 1840–c. 1890’, Family and Community History, 16, pp. 100–112.
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- Heringman, N., Sciences of antiquity: romantic antiquarianism, natural history, and knowledge work. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Holland, P., Broadcasting and the NHS in the Thatcherite 1980s: the challenge to public service. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Honigsbaum, M., ‘Regulating the 1918–19 pandemic: flu, stoicism and the Northcliffe Press’, Medical History, 57, pp. 165–185.
- Hopwood-Lewis, J. and Griffith, B., ‘ “The Wright Brothers' Boswell”: patent management and the British aviation industry, 1903–1914’, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 44, pp. 259–268.
- Hopwood-Lewis, J. and MacLeod, C., ‘Patents, publicity, and priority: the Aeronautical Society of Great Britain, 1897–1914’, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 44, pp. 212–221.
- Hunter, M. C., Wicked intelligence: visual art and the science of experiment in Restoration London. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
- T. Jones and R. Boyson, eds., The poetic Enlightenment: poetry and human science, 1650–1820. Pickering & Chatto.
- Keene, M., ‘From candles to cabinets: “familiar chemistry” in early Victorian Britain’, Ambix, 60, pp. 54–77.
- Kehoe, S. K., ‘Accessing empire: Irish surgeons and the Royal Navy, 1840–1880’, Social History of Medicine, 26, pp. 204–224.
- Kikuchi, Y., Anglo-American connections in Japanese chemistry: the lab as contact zone. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Kilday, A., A history of infanticide in Britain, c. 1600 to the present. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Larsen, T., ‘E. B. Tylor, religion and anthropology’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 467–485.
- Leggett, D., ‘Replication, re-placing and naval science in comparative context, c. 1868–1904’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 1–21.
- Leggett, D., ‘William Froude, John Henry Newman and scientific practice in the culture of Victorian doubt’, English Historical Review, 128, pp. 571–595.
- LeJacq, S. S., ‘The bounds of domestic healing: medical recipes, storytelling and surgery in early modern England’, Social History of Medicine, 26, pp. 451–468.
- B. Lightman, G. McQuat, and L. Stewart, eds., The circulation of knowledge between Britain, India, and China: the early-modern world to the twentieth century. Boston: Brill.
- Long, V., ‘Rethinking post-war mental health care: industrial therapy and the chronic mental patient in Britain’, Social History of Medicine, 26, pp. 738–758.
- Lorimer, D., Science, race relations and resistance: Britain, 1870–1914. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
- Lundgren, F., ‘The politics of participation: Francis Galton's anthropometric laboratory and the making of civic selves’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 445–466.
- MacLeod, C., ‘ “A delicate business”: wartime airplane designs and their post-war evaluation, 1919–1924’, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 44, pp. 269–279.
- McLelland, T., Britain's Cold War bombers. Fonthill.
- Malcolmson, C., Studies of skin color in the early Royal Society: Boyle, Cavendish, Swift. Aldershot: Ashgate.
- Mansfield, S., The long road to Stockholm: the story of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI): an autobiography. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Marshall, E. L., ‘A lifelong love affair—Sir Harry Ricardo and the sleeve valve’, International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology, 83, pp. 62–95.
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- Mathisen, A., ‘Mineral waters, electricity, and hemlock: devising therapeutics for children in eighteenth-century institutions’, Medical History, 57, pp. 28–44.
- Merchant, C., ‘Francis Bacon and the “vexations of art”: experimentation as intervention’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 551–599.
- Miller, I., ‘ “A prostitution of the profession”? Forcible feeding, prison doctors, suffrage and the British state, 1909–1914’, Social History of Medicine, 26, pp. 225–245.
- Milner, M., ‘The physics of Holy Oats: vernacular knowledge, qualities, and remedy in fifteenth century England’, Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 43, pp. 219–245.
- Miskell, L., Meeting places: scientific congresses and urban identity in Victorian Britain. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Mold, A., ‘Repositioning the patient: patient organizations, consumerism, and autonomy in Britain during the 1960s and 1970s’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 87, pp. 225–249.
- Monod, P. K., Solomon's secret arts: the occult in the Age of Enlightenment. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
- Moore, F., ‘ “Go and see Nell; she'll put you right”: the wisewoman and working-class health care in early twentieth-century Lancashire’, Social History of Medicine, 26, pp. 695–714.
- Moureau, S., ‘Elixir atque fermentum: new investigations about the link between Pseudo-Avicenna's alchemical De anima and Roger Bacon: alchemical and medical doctrines’, Traditio, 68, pp. 277–325.
- Mukherjee, S., ‘ “A warning against quack doctors”: the Old Bailey trial of Indian oculists, 1893’, Historical Research, 86, pp. 76–91.
- Nasim, O. W., ‘Extending the gaze: the temporality of astronomical paperwork’, Science in Context, 26, pp. 247–277.
- Nuvolari, A. and Sumner, J., ‘Inventors, patents, and inventive activities in the English brewing industry, 1634–1850’, Business History Review, 87, pp. 95–120.
- O'Brien, J., Bonesetters: a history of osteopathy in Britain. Tunbridge Wells: Anshan.
- O'Hara, G., ‘The complexities of “consumerism”: choice, collectivism and participation within Britain's National Health Service, c. 1961–c. 1979’, Social History of Medicine, 26, pp. 288–304.
- Odell, R., Medical detectives: the lives & cases of Britain's forensic five. Stroud: History.
- Ossa-Richardson, A., ‘Possession or insanity? Two views from the Victorian lunatic asylum’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 74, pp. 553–575.
- Owens, V., ‘James Brindley's notebooks, 1755–63: an eighteenth-century engineer writes about his work’, International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology, 83, pp. 222–252.
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- Pemberton, N., Rabies in Britain: dogs, disease and culture, 1830–2000. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Peters, T. J. and Willis, C., ‘Mental health issues of Maria I of Portugal and her sisters: the contributions of the Willis family to the development of psychiatry’, History of Psychiatry, 24, pp. 292–307.
- Podgorny, I., ‘Fossil dealers, the practices of comparative anatomy and British diplomacy in Latin America, 1820–1840’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 647–674.
- Prior, P. and McClelland, G., ‘Through the lens of the hospital magazine: Downshire and Holywell psychiatric hospitals in the 1960s and 1970s’, History of Psychiatry, 24, pp. 399–414.
- Rawcliffe, C., ‘ “Less mudslinging and more facts”: a new look at an old debate about public health in late medieval English towns’, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, 89, suppl., pp. 203–221.
- Rectenwald, M., ‘Secularism and the cultures of nineteenth-century scientific naturalism’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 231–254.
- Roffey, S., ‘Medieval leper hospitals in England: an archaeological perspective’, Medieval Archaeology, 56, pp. 203–233.
- Ruiz-Castell, P., ‘Seeing the invisible: the introduction and development of electron microscopy in Britain, 1935–1945’, History of Science, 51, pp. 221–249.
- Sayer, D. and Dickinson, S. D., ‘Reconsidering obstetric death and female fertility in Anglo-Saxon England’, World Archaeology, 45, pp. 285–297.
- Secord, J. A., Visions of science: books and readers at the dawn of the Victorian age: Sandars lectures, University of Cambridge, 25–27 February 2013. Cambridge: University of Cambridge.
- Segerstråle, U. C. O., Nature's oracle: a life and work of W. D. Hamilton. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Seneta, E., ‘Victorian probability and Lewis Carroll’, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society), 175 (2012), pp. 435–451.
- Shapira, M., ‘The psychological study of anxiety in the era of the Second World War’, Twentieth Century British History, 24, pp. 31–57.
- Shapira, M., The war inside: psychoanalysis, total war, and the making of the democratic self in postwar Britain. New York: Cambridge University Press.
- Simpson, A. T., ‘Transporting Lazarus: physicians, the state, and the creation of the modern paramedic and ambulance, 1955–73’, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 68, pp. 163–197.
- Smallman-Raynor, M. and Cliff, A. D., ‘Epidemics in semi-isolated communities: statistical perspectives on acute childhood diseases in English public boarding schools, 1930–1939’, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society), 176, pp. 321–346.
- Smith, M., Bletchley Park: the code-breakers of Station X. Oxford: Shire.
- Smith, R., Free will and the human sciences in Britain, 1870–1910. Pickering & Chatto.
- Toal, C., ‘Science, religion, and the geography of speech at the British Association: William Henry Dallinger (1839–1909) under the microscope’, Endeavour, 37, pp. 64–70.
- Virdi-Dhesi, J., ‘Curtis's cephaloscope: deafness and the making of surgical authority in London, 1816–1845’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 87, pp. 347–377.
- Wall, O., ‘The birth and death of Villa 21’, History of Psychiatry, 24, pp. 326–340.
- Wallis, J., ‘The bones of the insane’, History of Psychiatry, 24, pp. 196–211.
- Wander, T., Marconi on the Isle of Wight: the world's first wireless station. Sandy: Authors OnLine.
- Werrett, S., ‘Recycling in early modern science’, British Journal for the History of Science, 46, pp. 627–646.
- Whitfield, N., ‘Who is my donor? The local propaganda techniques of London's emergency blood transfusion service, 1939–45’, Twentieth Century British History, 24, pp. 542–572.
- Withers, C. W. J., ‘Science, scientific instruments and questions of method in nineteenth-century British geography’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 38, pp. 167–179.
- Woods, A., ‘From practical men to scientific experts: British veterinary surgeons and the development of government scientific expertise, c. 1878–1919’, History of Science, 51, pp. 457–480.
- Zimmerman, D., Radar: Britain's shield and the defeat of the Luftwaffe. Stroud: Amberley.
13. Social conditions and policy
- Abrams, L., ‘The taming of Highland masculinity: inter-personal violence and shifting codes of manhood, c. 1760–1840’, Scottish Historical Review, 92, pp. 100–122.
- Andersson, P. K., Streetlife in late Victorian London: the constable and the crowd. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Armstrong, J. W., ‘The justice ayre in the border sheriffdoms, 1493–1498’, Scottish Historical Review, 92, pp. 1–37.
- Banks, S., The British execution. Oxford: Shire.
- Beeston, D., Hospitable, generous England: anti-semitic journalism and literature in Britain during the First World War and its aftermath. Derbyshire: Birchwood Publications.
- Brealey, P., ‘The Charitable Corporation for the Relief of Industrious Poor: philanthropy, profit and sleaze in London, 1707–1733’, History, 98, pp. 708–729.
- Brennan-Whitmore, W. J, With the Irish in Frongoch. Cork: Mercier Press.
- Bromley, J., Envisioning sociology: Victor Branford, Patrick Geddes, and the quest for social reconstruction. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.
- Brown, A., Inter-war penal policy and crime in England: the Dartmoor Convict Prison riot, 1932. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Brown, C., ‘ “Hope against hopelessness”: Leicester's Homesteads for the Unemployed’, Leicestershire Historian, 49, pp. 33–40.
- Broxholme, P., ‘Back to the future? The Tory Party, paternalism, and housing policy in Nottingham, 1919–1932’, Midland History, 38, pp. 99–118.
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- Calderwood, P., Freemasonry and the press in the twentieth century: a national newspaper study of England and Wales. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Chaney, P., ‘Electoral politics and the party politicisation of human rights: the case of the UK Westminster elections 1945–2010’, Parliamentary Affairs, 67, pp. 209–231.
- Chapman, D. W., ‘The legendary John Howard and prison reform in the eighteenth century’, Eighteenth Century Theory and Interpretation, 54, pp. 545–550.
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- Reid, S., Scottish national dress and tartan. Oxford: Shire.
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- Saunders, V., Golf—the first 100 years: the unbelievable history of Abbotsley Golf Club. St Neots: Abbotsley Publishing.
- Scheuerle, W. H., Croquet and its influence on Victorian society: the first game that men and women could play together socially. Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press.
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- Schmidt, G. D., Elizabethan translation and literary culture. Berlin: De Gruyter.
- Seaton, J., ‘The BBC and the “hidden wiring” of the British constitution: the imposition of the broadcasting ban in 1988’, Twentieth Century British History, 24, pp. 448–471.
- Sharpe, K., Rebranding rule: the restoration and revolution monarchy, 1660–1714. Yale University Press.
- Shore, H., ‘ “Constable dances with instructress”: the police and the Queen of Nightclubs in inter-war London’, Social History, 38, pp. 183–202.
- Snape, R., ‘All-in wrestling in inter-war Britain: science and spectacle in Mass Observation's “worktown” ’, International Journal of the History of Sport, 30, pp. 1418–1435.
- Sneddon, A., Possessed by the devil: the real history of the Islandmagee Witches and Ireland's only mass witchcraft trial. Dublin: History Press Ireland.
- Solomon, D., Prologues and epilogues of Restoration theater: gender and comedy, performance and print. Newark: University of Delaware Press.
- Spina, O., Une ville en scènes: politique et spectacles à Londres sous les Tudors (1525–1603). Paris: Classiques Garnier.
- Sutcliffe, M. P., ‘The Toynbee Travellers' Club and the transnational education of citizens, 1888–90’, History Workshop Journal, 76, pp. 137–159.
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- Thurley, S., Men from the ministry: how Britain saved its heritage. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
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- Vamplew, W., ‘Theories and typologies: a historical explanation of the sports club in Britain’, International Journal of the History of Sport, 30, pp. 1569–1585.
- Vickery, A., ‘Mutton dressed as lamb? Fashioning age in Georgian England’, Journal of British Studies, 52, pp. 858–886.
- Walden, K. B., British film studios. Oxford: Shire.
- Walter, H., ‘ “Van Dyck in action”: dressing Charles I for the Victorian stage’, Costume, 47, pp. 161–179.
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- J. H. Williams and J. D. McClure, eds., Fresche fontanis: studies in the culture of medieval and early modern Scotland. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
- Willumsen, L., Witches of the north: Scotland and Finnmark. Leiden: Brill.
- Wooding, B., John Lowin and the English theatre, 1603–1647: acting and cultural politics on the Jacobean and Caroline stage. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Worley, M., ‘Oi! Oi! Oi! Class, locality, and British punk’, Twentieth Century British History, 24, pp. 606–636.
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- Young, S., ‘A history of the Fairy Investigation Society, 1927–1960’, Folklore, 124, pp. 139–156.
15. Economic thought and policy
- Backhouse, R. and Bateman, B., ‘Inside out: Keynes's use of the public sphere’, History of Political Economy, 45, pp. 68–91.
- Boynton, T. J., ‘ “Things that are outside of ourselves”: ethnology, colonialism, and the ontological critique of capitalism in Matthew Arnold's criticism’, English Literary History, 80, pp. 149–172.
- Bramall, R., The cultural politics of austerity: past and present in austere times. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Burton, M., The politics of public sector reform: from Thatcher to the coalition. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Carey, D., ‘Locke's species: money and philosophy in the 1690s’, Annals of Science, 70, pp. 357–380.
- Clarke, H. D., Affluence, austerity and electoral change in Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Cloyne, J., ‘Discretionary tax changes and the macroeconomy: new narrative evidence from the United Kingdom’, American Economic Review, 103, pp. 1507–1528.
- Cobb, S., Preparing for blockade 1885–1914: naval contingency for economic warfare. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Coffman, D., ‘Towards a new Jerusalem: the Committee for Regulating the Excise, 1649–1653’, English Historical Review, 128, pp. 1418–1450.
- Crafts, N. F. R., Fiscal policy in a depressed economy: was there a ‘free lunch’ in 1930s' Britain? Centre for Economic Policy Research.
- Crafts, N. and Mills, T. C., ‘Rearmament to the rescue? New estimates of the impact of “Keynesian” policies in 1930s Britain’, Journal of Economic History, 73, pp. 1077–1104.
- Dudley, C., ‘Party politics, political economy, and economic development in early eighteenth-century Britain’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 1084–1100.
- Godden, C., ‘Observers, commentators, and persuaders: British interwar economists as public intellectuals’, History of Political Economy, 45, pp. 38–67.
- Graham, A., ‘Auditing Leviathan: corruption and state formation in early eighteenth-century Britain’, English Historical Review, 128, pp. 806–838.
- G. Hacche and C. Taylor, eds., Inside the Bank of England: memoirs of Christopher Dow, chief economist, 1973–84. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Humphries, J., ‘The lure of aggregates and the pitfalls of the patriarchal perspective: a critique of the high wage economy interpretation of the British industrial revolution’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 693–714.
- King, S., When the money runs out: the end of western affluence. Yale University Press.
- Loft, P., ‘Political arithmetic and the English land tax in the reign of William III’, Historical Journal, 56, pp. 341–343.
- McKibbin, R., ‘Political sociology in the guise of economics: J. M. Keynes and the rentier’, English Historical Review, 128, pp. 78–106.
- Margócsy, D., ‘The fuzzy metrics of money: the finances of travel and the reception of curiosities in early modern Europe’, Annals of Science, 70, pp. 381–404.
- Newton, S., ‘Sterling, Bretton Woods, and social democracy, 1968–1970’, Diplomacy and Statecraft, 24, pp. 427–455.
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- Wade, R., Conservative Party economic policy: from Heath in opposition to Cameron in coalition. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
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16. Women's history
- Alexander, A., The ambitions of Jane Franklin. Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin.
- Backscheider, P., Elizabeth Singer Rowe and the development of the English novel. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
- Bailey, A. E., ‘Wives, mothers and widows on pilgrimage: categories of “woman” recorded at English healing shrines in the high middle ages’, Journal of Medieval History, 39, pp. 197–219.
- K. Barclay and D. Simonton, eds., Women in eighteenth-century Scotland: intimate, intellectual and public lives. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Barclay, K., ‘Farmwives, domesticity and work in late nineteenth-century Ireland’, Rural History, 24, pp. 143–160.
- Battista, K., Renegotiating the body: feminist art in 1970s London. I. B. Tauris.
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- Bending, S., Green retreats: women, gardens and eighteenth-century culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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- C. M. K. Bowden and J. E. Kelly, eds., The English convents in exile, 1600–1800: communities, culture, and identity. Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
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- Burke, C., A life in education and architecture: Mary Beaumont Medd. Farnham: Ashgate.
- S. Burman, ed., Fit work for women. Routledge.
- Clark, B. C. and Cruickshank, J., ‘Converting Mrs Crouch: women, wonders and the formation of English Methodism, 1738–1741’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 65, pp. 66–83.
- Collins, J., ‘Jane Holt, milliner, and other women in business: apprentices, freewomen and mistresses in the Clothworkers' Company, 1606–1800’, Textile History, 44, pp. 72–94.
- Conway, R., ‘Making the mill girl modern? Beauty, industry, and the popular newspaper in 1930s England’, Twentieth Century British History, 24, pp. 518–541.
- Cox, P., Bad girls in Britain: gender, justice and welfare, 1900–1950. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Cullen, L. T., ‘The First Lady Almoner: the appointment, position, and findings of Miss Mary Stewart at the Royal Free Hospital, 1895–99’, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 68, pp. 551–582.
- Dunn, C., Stolen women in medieval England: rape, abduction, and adultery, 1100–1500. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Durston, G., Wicked ladies: provincial women, crime and the eighteenth-century English justice system. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
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- Evans, S., Mrs Ronnie: the society hostess who collected kings. National Trust.
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- Hall, V., Women at work, 1860–1939: how different industries shaped women's experiences. Woodbridge: Boydell.
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- Hanson, L., The sweethearts: tales of love, laughter and hardship from the Yorkshire Rowntree's girls. HarperCollins.
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- McCrea, B., Frances Burney and narrative prior to ideology. Newark: University of Delaware Press.
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- Moore, B., ‘Illicit encounters: female civilian fraternization with Axis prisoners of war in Second World War Britain’, Journal of Contemporary History, 48, pp. 742–760.
- Moulton, M., ‘ “You have votes and power”: women's political engagement with the Irish Question in Britain, 1919–23’, Journal of British Studies, 52, pp. 179–204.
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- Owen, N., ‘Men and the 1970s British women's liberation movement’, Historical Journal, 56, pp. 801–826.
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- Parkins, W., Jane Morris: the burden of history. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
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- Read, S., Menstruation and the female body in early-modern England. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Rhodes, P., Bobby on the beat. Penguin Books.
- Richardson, S., The political worlds of women: gender and politics in nineteenth century Britain. New York: Routledge.
- Robert, K., ‘Constructions of “home”, “front”, and women's military employment in First-World-War Britain: a spatial interpretation’, History and Theory, 52, pp. 319–343.
- Robertson, B. P., Elizabeth Inchbald's reputation: a publishing and reception history. Pickering & Chatto.
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- Seddon, L., British women composers and instrumental chamber music in the early twentieth century. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Seltzer, A., ‘The impact of female employment on male salaries and careers: evidence from the English banking industry, 1890–1941’, Economic History Review, 66, pp. 1039–1062.
- Sheffield, G., Women's epistolary utterance: a study of the letters of Joan and Maria Thynne, 1575–1611. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company.
- Shoshkes, E., Jaqueline Tyrwhitt: a transnational life in urban planning and design. Farnham: Ashgate.
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- Spark, M., Mary Shelley. Manchester: Carcanet.
- Strasdin, K., ‘Fashioning Alexandra: a royal approach to style, 1863–1910’, Costume, 47, pp. 180–197.
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- Todd, C., The wreck of the Neva: the horrifying fate of a convict ship and the Irish women aboard. Cork: Mercier Press.
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17. Sources and archives
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- W. Scase, ed., The making of the Vernon manuscript: the production and contexts of Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Eng.poet.a. 1. Turnhout: Brepols.
- Serjeantson, R., ‘The philosophy of Francis Bacon in early Jacobean Oxford, with an edition of an unknown manuscript of the Valerius Terminus’, Historical Journal, 56, pp. 1087–1106.
- Stamp, G., ‘The photograph album of Albert Henry Scott, the photographer son of George Gilbert Scott’, Antiquaries Journal, 93, pp. 401–415.
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- Whelan, T., ‘Baptist autographs in the John Rylands Library, Manchester, 1741–1907’, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, 89, 2, pp. 203–225.
- H. White and B. Boydell, eds., The encyclopaedia of music in Ireland. Dublin: University College Dublin Press.
- Wishart, J., ‘A history of the Shetland archives’, Archives and Records, 34, pp. 95–110.
18. Historiography and methodology
- Abosch, Y., ‘An exceptional power: equity in Thomas Hobbes's Dialogue on the common law’, Political Research Quarterly, 66, pp. 18–31.
- N. Adler and Leydesdorff, eds., Tapestry of memory: evidence and testimony in life-story narratives. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.
- Bell, A., History on television. Routledge.
- M. Berg, ed., Writing the history of the global: challenges for the 21st century. Oxford: Oxford University Press for the British Academy.
- Bignell, B., Mapping the windmill: the Ordnance Survey in England. Charles Close Society.
- Breeze, D. J., 200 years: the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne, 1813–2013. Newcastle upon Tyne: Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle upon Tyne.
- Brewer, D. A., ‘The tactility of authorial names’, Eighteenth Century Theory and Interpretation, 54, pp. 195–213.
- Brookes, J., Beyond the Burghal Hidage: Anglo-Saxon civil defence in the Viking age. Leiden: Brill.
- J. Burton, P. Schofield, and B. Weiler, eds., Proceedings of the Aberystwyth and Lampeter Conference, 2011. Woodbridge: Boydell.
- Butlin, R. A., The Historical Geography Research Group: a history. Historical Geography Research Group.
- Camp, C. T., ‘Spatial memory, historiographic fantasy, and the touch of the past in St Erkenwald’, New Literary History, 44, pp. 471–491.
- Cannadine, D., The undivided past: history beyond our differences. Allen Lane.
- Casey, B., ‘Selected list of writing on Irish economic and social history published in 2012’, Irish Economic and Social History, 40, pp. 98–113.
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- Coykendall, A., ‘Chance enlightenment, choice, superstitions: Walpole's historic doubts and enlightenment historicism’, Eighteenth Century Theory and Interpretation, 54, pp. 53–70.
- De Bont, R., ‘ “Writing in letters of blood”: manners in scientific dispute in nineteenth century Britain and the German lands’, History of Science, 51, pp. 309–335.
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- Evans, N. and Pryce, H., Writing a small nation's past: Wales in comparative perspective, 1850–1950. Farnham: Ashgate.
- Fasolt, C., The limits of history. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
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- Gibney, J., The shadow of a year: the 1641 rebellion in Irish history and memory. Madison, WI: The University of Wisconsin Press.
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- Hoffer, P. C., Clio among the muses: essays on history and the humanities. New York: New York University Press.
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- Hughes-Warrington, M., Revisionist histories. Routledge.
- Iriye, A., Global and transnational history: the past, present, and future. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
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- A. MacKillop, ed., The state of early modern and modern Scottish histories, suppl., Scottish Historical Review, 92, 234.
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- Manias, C., Race, science, and the nation: reconstructing the ancient past in Britain, France and Germany. Routledge.
- Manning, P., Big data in history. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
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- Moshenska, G., ‘Reflections on the 1943 “Conference on the Future of Archaeology” ’, Archaeology International, 16, pp. 128–139.
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19. General economic and social history
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- Clarkson, W., Armed robbery. Carlton Books.
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- Gibney, J., Seán Heuston. Dublin: O'Brien Press.
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- Reece, H., The Army in Cromwellian England, 1649–1660. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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- Shin, K., ‘George Pryne, Dugdale Stewart, and political economy at Cambridge’, History of Political Economy, 45, pp. 61–97.
- Smith, A., The nation made real: art and national identity in western Europe, 1600–1850. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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- C. Tite, ed., Patronage, visual culture, and courtly life: in eighteenth-century Germany and England. Amherst, NY: Cambria Press.
- Travis, M., ‘ “Both English and Jewish”: negotiating cultural boundaries in “Young Israel, 1897–1901” ’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 46, pp. 116–141.
- G. Tyack, ed., John Nash: architect of the picturesque. Swindon: English Heritage.
- Urban, M., The tank war: the men, the machines and the long road to victory. Little, Brown.
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- Walters, G. and Hamil, S., ‘The contests for power and influence over the regulatory space within the English professional football industry, 1980–2012’, Business History, 55, pp. 740–767.
- Waurechen, S., ‘Imagined polities, failed dreams, and the beginnings of an unacknowledged Britain: English responses to James VI and I's vision of perfect union’, Journal of British Studies, 52, pp. 597–614.
- Wilkin, P., ‘George Orwell: the English dissident as Tory anarchist’, Political Studies, 61, pp. 197–214.
- Zerbe, B., The birth of the Royal Marines, 1664–1802. Woodbridge: Boydell.