About this Event
The 19th century was a period of profound social and political transformation across the British Isles and the wider empire. Rapid population growth, economic change, and industrialisation unsettled established social relations and brought new groups into the sphere of politics.
Agricultural labourers, small tenants, artisans, and industrial workers increasingly challenged the political monopoly of a wealthy and educated elite, demanding the abolition of unjust laws, a fairer distribution of resources, and a more representative political system.
Two of the most important popular movements to emerge from these conditions were Irish agrarian agitation and British Chartism. Although they developed in different social and economic contexts, both reflected the growing politicisation of the lower orders and the emergence of mass politics in the nineteenth century. In Ireland, rural protest movements mobilised against rack-rents, tithes, and evictions, often drawing on older traditions of collective resistance and moral economy. In Britain, Chartism organised working people around a national programme of political reform, centred on the People’s Charter and its demand for expanded political rights. The legacies of these movements continue to shape British, Irish, and even Australian politics to this day.
Dr Neil Pye is a political scientist and historian who teaches British Politics at the University of Liverpool. His specialisms are the post-war history of the Labour Party, for which he has published material about former Prime Ministers and Leader's James Callaghan and John Smith; devolution and metro mayors; British political ideologies and Chartism, for which in 2013, he published a book: the Home Office and the Suppression of Chartism in the West Riding of Yorkshire, 1838-48.
Constantin Torve (MA, Uppsala) is a PhD student in history at Queen’s University Belfast. His ESRC-funded research project investigates the adaptation of agrarian secret societies in nineteenth-century Ireland to changing socio-economic environments, particularly their expansion from agrarian into industrial contexts.
For directions to the Central Teaching Hub (CTH) and information on parking on the University of Liverpool campus, please see. The Rendall is building number 221 in square F7 on the downloadable campus map ().
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
GFlex, University of Liverpool, Central Teaching Hub, Liverpool, United Kingdom
GBP 0.00











