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IAS Book Launch: The Madman and the Churchrobber

24 May 2023, 6:00 pm–8:00 pm

Part of the book cover with title and author name

Roundtable discussion with author Jason Peacey (UCL History) about The Madman and the Churchrobber: Law and Conflict in Early Modern England.

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Chloe Ireton

Location

IAS Common Ground
G11, Ground Floor, South Wing, Wilkins Building
UCL, Gower Street, London
WC1E 6BT

About the Book

This microhistory reconstructs and analyses a protracted legal dispute over a small parcel of land called Warrens Court in Nibley, Gloucestershire, which was contested between successive generations of two families from the mid-sixteenth century to the early eighteenth century. Employing a rich cache of archival material, Jason Peacey traces legal contestation over time and through a range of different courts, as well as in Parliament and the public domain, and contends that a microhistorical approach makes it possible to shed valuable light upon the legal and political culture of early modern England, not least by comprehending how certain disputes became protracted and increasingly bitter, and why they fascinated contemporaries. This involves recognising the dynamic of litigation, in terms of how disputes changed over time, and how those involved in myriad lawsuits found legal reasons for prolonging contestation. It also involves exploring litigants' strategies and practices, as well as competing claims about the way in which adversaries behaved, and incompatible expectations of the legal system. Finally, it involves teasing out the structural issues in play, in terms of the social, cultural, and ideological identities of successive generations. Ultimately, this dispute is employed to address important historiographical debates surrounding the nature of civil litigation in early modern England, and to provide new ways of appreciating the nature, severity, and visibility of political and religious conflict in the decades before and after the English Revolution.

The discussion will be chaired by Chloe Ireton (UCL History), the respondents will be Professor Mark Knights (The University of Warwick) and Professor Jean-Paul Ghobrial (University of Oxford).

About the Speaker

Professor Jason Peacey

at UCL History

Jason Peacey's area of interest is British history in the early modern period. His research focuses on the politics and political culture of early modern Britain, and he is particularly interested in the relationships between print culture and political life, and between citizens and the state. Jason is interested, therefore, in propaganda and censorship, and in the exploitation of the press by the political elite, as well as in the rise of news culture, and in the ways in which contemporaries from all walks of life and all parts of the country experienced the early modern 'information revolution' and participated in political affairs. He is currently working on ideas and practices of citizenship, not least petitioning, not least in terms of the responsiveness (or otherwise) of political elites to the grievances of ordinary subjects, and how this generated political thinking. This has recently involved being Co-I on an AHRC project, ‘The Power of Petitioning in Seventeenth Century England’. At the same time he is also developing a new project relating to diplomatic culture in seventeenth-century Europe, which will explore the possibilities that emerged for cross-border political cooperation in circumstances of social, economic and cultural ‘entanglement’, of jurisdictional uncertainty, and of constrained sovereignty. 

More about Professor Jason Peacey