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However, conservatives were unable to bring about the resurrection of "Whiggery".
One historian believed his whiggery was more temperamental than ideological.
For historical details, see the article about Whiggery.
Indeed, if this book has a single overarching theme, it is aristocratic Whiggery's rise and fall.
Under her rule, Holland House was the intellectual capital of Whiggery.
Hanoverian Whiggery also became more divorced from association with the cause of Dissent.
There was greater unity to classical liberalism ideology than there had been with Whiggery.
He is right that its believers have finally lost belief in it, that Whiggery is at last dead.
Some elements of Whiggery opposed this new thinking, and were uncomfortable with the commercial nature of classical liberalism.
So too is the essential Whiggery of the limitation of the Prince's revenues.
It smells of whiggery; of history as chauvinism.
And his Whiggery bears Utilitarianism instead of the vanity of a flower.
His political views shifted towards Whiggery, especially anti-Jackson.
(The term "Whiggery" is ambiguous in contemporary usage: it may either mean party politics and ideology, or a general intellectual approach.)
Barrington remained in the party, yet a country whig/Tory for all that with independently-minded ideas distinct from London whiggery.
Anarchism in the United Kingdom initially developed within the context of radical Whiggery and Protestant religious dissent.
The Dedication critiques Whiggery and "republican" politics, or political practices which strove to continue the Reformation in England.
In fact, like most of the legendary pushovers in history, the 18th-century ascendancy of Whiggery, aristocracy and corruption was a 'damned close-run thing'.
Howe represented a kind of moderate whiggery in the party being educated lawyerly; diligent and direct, but conciliatory and collegiate in style.
The moderates will be welcomed aboard the Ark's decks after being purged of their Whiggery by swallowing a dose of seawater.
James K. McConica, "Kingsford and Whiggery in Canadian History."
As Thomas Alexander (1961) showed, there was persistent Whiggery (support for the principles of the defunct Whig Party) in the South after 1865.
The great figures of reformist Whiggery were Charles James Fox (died 1806) and his disciple and successor Earl Grey.
However, Whiggery as a political doctrine had little affinity for classical political economy, the tabernacle of the Manchester School and William Gladstone.
Norman D. Brown, Edward Stanly: Whiggery's Tarheel 'Conqueror.
A starting point may be a phrase rooted in true Whiggism.
This new approach to the grass roots helped to define Whiggism and opened the way for later success.
Conventional Whiggism has no foothold after he has done with its analysis.
It is based on the ideology of the former Whigs, Whiggism.
In the unfolding of the American Revolution such whiggism became known as republicanism.
An advocate of traditional Whiggism, he strongly believed in ensuring society was protected from conflict between the upper and lower classes.
Whiggism took different forms in England and Scotland, even though from 1707 the two nations shared a single parliament.
Any alternative view, it seemed, would imply a fatal lapse into Whiggism and a naive belief in progress.
Burke was repeatedly called an apostate from Whiggism.
The republicans also borrowed ideas and values from Whiggism and Enlightenment philosophers.
Quickly following the adoption of 'whig' as the name of a political faction, the word whiggism was already in use by the 1680s.
His opinion of France gradually altered, but in his Whiggism he never faltered.
American Whiggism was known as republicanism.
Tyrrell's moderate position came to dominate Whiggism, and British constitutionalism as a whole, from 1688 to the 1770s.
In 1682, Hickeringill published his History of Whiggism.
It is therefore hardly surprising to discover that Whiggism regards not just individuals as capable of violating law, but governments as well.
Whiggism in the eighteenth century', in John Cannon (ed.)
Coining of "whiggism"
Ward says that Locke's liberal Whiggism rested on a radically individualist theory of natural rights and limited government.
The revolutionary republic is also heavily influenced by Whiggism and Enlightenment ideologues and philosophers.
The Reform Act was the climax of Whiggism, but it also brought about the Whigs' demise.
William Hutcheon, Whigs and Whiggism: political writings (new edition, 1971)
His sympathies inclined to Low Churchism in religion and to Whiggism in politics.
One meaning of 'whiggism' given by the Oxford English Dictionary is "moderate or antiquated Liberalism".
He was a zealous Hanoverian, and a favourite with Queen Anne in spite of his Whiggism.
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