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Lawrence Stone

    Lawrence Stone war ein englischer Historiker des frühen britischen Neuzeit, bekannt für seine Arbeiten zum englischen Bürgerkrieg und zur Ehe. Er war ein wichtiger Verfechter der Anwendung sozialwissenschaftlicher Methoden auf die Geschichtsforschung. Stone trug mit seiner Forschung zu einem tieferen Verständnis der sozialen und institutionellen Veränderungen dieser Epoche bei.

    The Crisis of the Aristocracy, 1558-1641
    The Causes of the English Revolution, 1529-1642
    The Past and the Present Revisited
    Uncertain Unions
    An Open Elite?
    Ursachen der englischen Revolution 1529 - 1642
    • 1995
    • 1993

      Broken Lives

      Separation and Divorce in England, 1660-1857

      • 396 Seiten
      • 14 Lesestunden

      * Fascinating and revealing case-histories reflect changing attitudes of the time towards love, marriage, and divorce * Completes Lawrence Stone's acclaimed trilogy on marriage and family life * Offers compelling insights into daily life and marital conduct from the mid-17th to the mid-19th century

      Broken Lives
    • 1992

      Uncertain Unions

      Marriage in England, 1660-1753

      • 308 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden
      4,3(7)Abgeben

      "In Road to Divorce, Lawrence Stone explored the different ways in which marriage took place, and analysed the confusion and uncertainty surrounding the legality of the institution in its various forms before the Marriage Act of 1753. He now shows in absorbing detail, through a series of case-studies, how courting and marrying couples tended to manoeuvre around the ambiguities of the law, and how they sometimes became entangled in a web of moral and legal contradiction leading to personal catastrophe. There are stories about unwise courtship, prenuptial pregnancies, forced marriages by parents or parish officials, bigamy, clandestine marriages often performed in haste in peculiarly squalid circumstances and repented at leisure. These fascinating studies reveal in intimate, often ribald, detail how men and women adjusted their sexual conduct, moral attitudes, and matrimonial plans to suit an ambiguous legal situation." "Professor Stone has traced the ways in which, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, demands by individuals for love and affection were starting to take precedence over family interests and parental dictation in the search for a spouse; the studies he has drawn from court records for Uncertain Unions enable us to see this great moral transition being played out in the lives of men and women, often in their own words. These are vivid, human histories, presented in revealing detail, by a leading historian of the family."--Jacket

      Uncertain Unions
    • 1990

      * The first full study of a topic rich in historical interest and contemporary importance Despite the infamous divorce of Henry VIII in 1529, subsequent moral, political, and religious attitudes ensured that until 1857, England was the only Protestant country with virtually no facilities for full divorce on the grounds of adultery, desertion, or cruelty. Using a mass of transcribed legal testimonies, taken from hitherto unexplored court records, Professor Stone uncovers the means by which laity and lawyers reformed the divorce laws, and offers astonishingly frank and intimate insights into our ancestors' changing views about what makes a marriage. Using personal accounts in which witnesses speak freely about their moral attitudes towards love, sex, adultery, and marriage, Lawrence Stone reveals, for the first time, the full and complex story of how English men and women have contrived to use, twist, or defy the law in order to deal with marital breakdown.

      Road to divorce England 1530-1987
    • 1987
    • 1986

      An Open Elite?

      England, 1540-1880

      4,4(3)Abgeben

      Covering a period of three and a half centuries between two great upheavals in landed society--the Dissolution of the Monasteries and the Agricultural Depression--this highly-acclaimed study examines the traditional view that for centuries English landed society has been open to infiltrationby families made newly rich through trade, office, or the professions. The Stones focus on the landed elite of Hertfordshire, Northamptonshire, and the Northumberland counties, combining case histories and examples with in-depth research to test the historical validity of one of the most cherishedbeliefs about English society, economics, and politics. For this abridged edition, the authors have retained the essential contents of the original hardcover while omitting the supporting scholarly aparatus.

      An Open Elite?
    • 1986

      Contains much the best all-round analysis of the causes of the English Revolution that we have. It synthesizes and makes sense of the research of a whole generation of scholars.

      The Causes of the English Revolution, 1529-1642
    • 1977

      This book studies the evolution of the family from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century and how the process radically influenced child-rearing, education, contraception, sexual behaviour and marriage.

      The Family, Sex and Marriage in England 1500-1800
    • 1974