Difference between revisions of "Important Victorian Legislation"

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(Bills)
(Bills)
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==Bills==
 
==Bills==
 
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* Roman Catholic Relief Act (1829) - Catholic emancipation - hot topic at start of [[Middlemarch (Eliot, 1872)|Middlemarch]]
 
* Reform Act (1832)
 
* Reform Act (1832)
 
* Ten Hour Bill (1832) - Sadler - trying to regulate industrial labor - opposed by industrialists like those depicted in [[North and South (Gaskell, 1855)]] (intro xviii)
 
* Ten Hour Bill (1832) - Sadler - trying to regulate industrial labor - opposed by industrialists like those depicted in [[North and South (Gaskell, 1855)]] (intro xviii)

Revision as of 16:16, 21 September 2017

Bills

  • Roman Catholic Relief Act (1829) - Catholic emancipation - hot topic at start of Middlemarch
  • Reform Act (1832)
  • Ten Hour Bill (1832) - Sadler - trying to regulate industrial labor - opposed by industrialists like those depicted in North and South (Gaskell, 1855) (intro xviii)
  • Slavery Abolition Act (1833)
  • New Poor Law (late 30s) -- criticized in Oliver Twist
  • repeal of Corn Laws (1846) - more free trade
  • "taxes on knowledge" 1850s-60s (Attridge Conrad 2010)
  • Contagious Diseases Acts (1864)
  • Second Reform Act (1867)
  • Education Acts (starting 1870)
  • Married Woman's Property Act (1882)

Terminology

  • Entail: "Entail was a legal term meaning that a landed estate was tied up in such a way that the person inheriting it would have only its income -- and could not sell or mortgage it. Along with primogeniture, it was the legal basis of the British aristocracy'a ability to transmit their great estates intact down through the centuries." (Daniel Pool 1993 p. 304)