イギリス革命期「大衆請願」の用法にみられる革新性

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Title ( jpn )
イギリス革命期「大衆請願」の用法にみられる革新性
Title ( eng )
The Innovative Use of Printed Massive Petitions' in the English Revolution
Creator
Tomoda Takuji
Source Title
広島大学総合科学部紀要. I, 地域文化研究
Memoirs of the Faculty of Integrated Arts and Sciences, Hiroshima University. I, Studies in area culture
Volume 28
Start Page 39
End Page 69
Abstract
'For the first time in English history the combination of cheap printing and democratic ferment made the public ear both available and important.' (J. Frank, The Levellers, p.60) The purpose of this paper is to explore the important role of printed petitions. Petitions were printed for the use of petitioners, often with instructions about gathering signatures and about meeting to present the signed petitions in a procession to Parliament. The processions that took a petition to Parliament heightened popular interest in petitions and petitioners. All sides (Presbyterians, Independents, Levellers and Royalists) used printed petitions for propaganda or invoking public opinion. In the result many petitions came from associations of private persons. They met in private houses, taverns, and sectarian congregations to debate and sign petitions. Popular participation in petitions made a decisive break with traditional practice. Many citizen petitioners opposed or lobbied municipal corporations, such as London-only the mayor, aldermanic court, and Common Council had authority to issue petitions on behalf of the city corporation-over proposals to petition Parliament. The practical experience with novel use of printed petitions to appeal to public opinion led to novel ideas on the political order, for example 'consent' and 'reason'.
NDC
General history of Europe [ 230 ]
Political science [ 310 ]
Language
jpn
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publisher
広島大学総合科学部
Date of Issued 2002-12-31
Publish Type Version of Record
Access Rights open access
Date
[Created] 2006-03-21
Source Identifier
[ISSN] 0385-1451
[NCID] AN00140969