
Cavalry and Canvas: The Brutal Suppression of the Peterloo Massacre: Protests, Sabers, and the Bloody Catalyst for Democratic Reform in Victorian England, 1819.DE
Synopsis
What happens when a peaceful crowd of sixty thousand impoverished workers gathers to demand the right to vote, only to be met with the drawn sabers of their own government's cavalry? The tragic answer unfolded on a Manchester field during the Peterloo Massacre of 1819.In the wake of the Napoleonic Wars, England was gripped by severe famine and crushing unemployment. When working-class families assembled to demand parliamentary representation, local magistrates panicked. They ordered drunken, inexperienced cavalrymen to charge directly into the dense, unarmed crowd, resulting in hundreds of horrific injuries and sparking nationwide outrage. Instead of crushing the reform movement, the brutal optics of the massacre accidentally ignited the birth of modern British democracy.This meticulous historical investigation dissects the political paranoia of Victorian elites. It explores the suppression of the radical press, the desperate economics of the Industrial Revolution, and the slow, agonizing legislative battles that eventually dismantled aristocratic rule.Witness the bloody price of suffrage. The history of Peterloo is a chilling reminder of the violent lengths to which entrenched power will go to prevent political equality.
Publisher information
- Publisher: epubli
- ISBN: 9783565422319
- Dimensions: 8 x 210 x 297 mm
- Weight: 339g
- Languages: English