Lives of Victorian Political Figures: Pt. III: Queen Victoria, Florence Nightingale, Annie Besant and Millicent Garrett Fawcett by Their Contemporaries (Lives of Victorian Political Figures S.)

Lives of Victorian Political Figures: Pt. III: Queen Victoria, Florence Nightingale, Annie Besant and Millicent Garrett Fawcett by Their Contemporaries (Lives of Victorian Political Figures S.)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 1712 p.
  • 商品コード 9781851968282

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"Lives of Victorian Political Figures, Part III: Queen Victoria, Florence Nightingale, Annie Besant and Millicent Garrett Fawcett by their Contemporaries" - the series editors are Nancy LoPatin-Lummis and Michael Partridge; and volume editors are Nancy Fix Anderson, Walter L Arnstein, Deborah Logan, and Susie L Steinbach. "Lives of Victorian Political Figures" features 4 Volumes.The third set in this successful series focuses on four iconic female political figures from the Victorian era. Although women were excluded from the political franchise, many individuals were highly influential in public life, not least the Queen who gave her name to the period. This four-volume facsimile edition draws together contemporary sources relating to Queen Victoria (1819-1901), Florence Nightingale (1820-1910), Annie Besant (1847-1933) and Millicent Garrett Fawcett (1847-1929).Wide-ranging political issues are addressed. Women's suffrage, birth control and female education were highly contentious topics as women sought to improve their legal, educational, political, marital and economic status. However, all four women also played significant roles in wider movements of the nineteenth century, including imperial expansion, the labour movement, secularism and sanitary reform. Carefully selected extracts from biographies, memoirs, diaries, private letters and other ephemera reveal how these iconic women were viewed by their contemporaries. The edition benefits from a general introduction, volume introductions, headnotes, endnotes and a consolidated index. It will be vital to those studying Nineteenth-Century Studies, Women's History, the History of Suffrage and the History of Nursing.

Contents

Volume 1: Queen VictoriaEditor: Walter L Arnstein'Birth Announcement', The Times (1819); 'Eighteenth Birthday Celebration', The Times (1837); 'The Coronation', Annual Register (1838); 'The Bed-Chamber Crisis', Annual Register (1839); 'The Wedding Ceremony', Annual Register (1840); Tallis's Illustrated London (1851) (excerpt); 'The Queen of the Highlands', Edinburgh Review (1868); Charles Bradlaugh, The Impeachment of the House of Brunswick (1871); 'The National Thanksgiving', Annual Register (1872); Hansard's Parliamentary Debates (1876); 'Queen Victoria', Temple Bar (1884); Daryl Philippe, Public Life in England (1884); Georgiana Baroness Bloomfield, Reminiscences of Court and Diplomatic Life (1885); 'The Meeting of Queen Victoria and Chancellor Otto Bismarck', The Times (1888); Mark Twain, Queen Victoria's Jubilee (1897); Hansard's Parliamentary Debates (1901); 'The Late Queen', Harper's Weekly (1901); 'The Character of Queen Victoria', Quarterly Review (1901); Marquis of Lorne, V.R.I. Queen Victoria: Her Life and Empire (1901); Walter Walsh, Religious Life and Influence of Queen Victoria (1902); Sir Theodore Martin, Queen Victoria As I Knew Her (1908); The Panmure Papers (1908); Lord Broughton, Recollections of a Long Life (1911); Correspondence of Sarah Spencer Lady Lyttelton 1787-1870 (1912); Letters of Lady Augusta Stanley, a Young Lady at Court, 1849-63 (1927)Volume 2: Florence NightingaleEditor: Deborah LoganAnon, 'Who is Mrs Nightingale?', The Times (1854); G Shepherd, 'Hospital Assistants in the East', Letter to the Editor, The Times (1854); Sidney Herbert, 'Letter to the Editor', Morning Chronicle (1854); Letter from Osborne to Herbert (1854); 'The Nightingale in the East', (1854); Anon, 'The Nightingale's Song to the Sick Soldier', Punch (1854); Sidney Herbert, MP, The Conduct of the War: A Speech Delivered in the House of Commons on Tuesday, 12th of December, 1854 (1854); Anon, 'A Nightingale in the Camp', Punch (1855); Reverend Sydney Godolphin Osborne, Scutari and its Hospitals (1855); 'Miss NightingaleA...Balaclava', Illustrated London News (1855); Anon, 'The Nightingale's Nest', Punch (1855); Anon, Florence Nightingale and the Crimea, 1854-55 (1855-56); Anon, 'Miss Nightingale's Carriage at the Seat of War', Illustrated London News (1856); Anon, Eastern Hospitals and English Nurses; The Narrative of Twelve Months' Experience in the Hospitals of Koulali and Scutari by a Lady Volunteer (1856); Anon, 'The Nightingale's Return', Punch (1856); Anon, 'The Sultan and the Nurses of Scutari', Illustrated London News (1856); Anon, 'The Nightingale at Oxford', Punch (1856); Peter Pincoffs, Experiences of a Civilian in Eastern Military Hospitals (1857); Anon [Henry Wadsworth Longfellow], 'Santa Filomena', Atlantic Monthly (1857); Edward I L B Campbell, The Heroine of Scutari, and Other Poems (1857); Anon, 'Two Noble Women', Harper's Weekly (1857); Alexis Soyer, 'A Culinary Campaign', Harper's New Monthly Magazine (1858); Mary Cowden Clarke, 'Florence Nightingale', World-Noted Women; or, Types of Womanly Attributes of All Lands and Ages (1858); Ingleby Scott [Harriet Martineau], 'Representative Women. The Free Nurse', Once a Week (1860); Charles Shrimpton, The Crimean War: The British Army and Miss Nightingale (1864); Anon, A Woman's Example and a Nation's Work: A Tribute to Florence Nightingale (1864); W C Maclean, 'Miss Nightingale on Theories of Disease', The Lancet (1870); Letter from Harriet Beecher Stowe (1872); Millicent Garrett Fawcett, Some Eminent Women of our Times (1889); E F Pollard, Florence Nightingale: The Wounded Soldier's Friend (1891); Lizzie Alldridge, The World's Workers: Florence Nightingale (1893); Robert Meyers, 'Florence Nightingale', World-Famous Women: Types of Heroism, Beauty and Influence including the Life, Reign and Diamond Jubilee of Victoria Sixty Years a Queen (1897); Edwin Pratt, Pioneer Women in Victoria's Reign: Being Short Histories of Great Movements (1897); Reverend W H Fitchett, 'Fights for the Flag', Cornhill Magazine (1898); Anon, 'The Ministry to the Sick and Wounded Soldiery in War Times', The Missionary Review of the World (1900); Lord Stanmore, Sidney Herbert, Lord Herbert of Lea, A Memoir (1906); Anon, 'Her Shadow', Atlantic Monthly (1906); Victoria to Lord Panmure, The Panmure Papers (1908); Major C E Pollock, 'Original Communications. Florence Nightingale, O.M., R.R.C.', Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps (1910); Marion Holmes, Florence Nightingale: A Cameo Life-Sketch (1910); F S, 'The Lady of the Lamp', Evening News (1910); Anon [Flora Masson], Florence Nightingale, O. M. 'The Lady with the Lamp',: By One who Knew Her (1910); Adelaide Nutting, A Memorial to Florence Nightingale (1910); Mae Peregrine, 'Florence Nightingale', American Journal of Nursing (1911); Edna Locke, Medical Seminar Discussions (1912); Annie Matheson, Florence Nightingale: A Biography (1912); Mary Aldis, Florence Nightingale: An Appreciation (1914); W Wedderburn, 'Florence Nightingale on India', The Contemporary Review (1914); Elizabeth Scovil, 'Florence Nightingale and her Nurses', American Journal of Nursing (1914); Edwin Kopf, 'Florence Nightingale as Statistician', Publications of the American Statistical Association (1916); W J W, The Story of Florence Nightingale: The Heroine of the Crimea (1928); Anon, 'Desultory Verses by an Old Soldier', (n.d); obituaries and memorials from The Times, The Daily News, The Spectator, British Medical Journal, The Nursing TimesVolume 3: Annie BesantEditor: Nancy Fix AndersonReverend Charles Maurice Davies, Mystic London: or, Phases of Occult Life in the Metropolis (1875); Anon, 'Annie Besant', The Secular Chronicle (1878); Charles Bradlaugh, 'Review: Modern Socialism by Annie Besant', The National Reformer (1886); W P Ball, Mrs Besant's Socialism: An Examination and an Exposure (1886); John M Robertson, 'Mrs Besant's Libel Action', The National Reformer (1889); Charles Bradlaugh, 'Some Words of Explanation', National Reformer (1889); G W Foote, Mrs Besant's Theosophy (1889); R Jagannathiah, 'Persecution by the Freethinkers', Theosophist (1890); Dr C R Drysdale, 'Mrs Annie Besant's Objections to Neo-Malthusianism', The Malthusian (1891); W T Stead, 'Character Sketch: Mrs Annie Besant', Review of Reviews (1891); Edmund Garrett, Isis Very Much Unveiled, Being the Story of the Great Mahatma Hoax (1894); W E Gladstone, 'True and False Conceptions of the Atonement', Nineteenth Century (1894); Anon, 'Two Noble Lives; and Another', London Quarterly Review (1894); Anon, 'Annie Besant, An Autobiography', Athenaeum (1894); Kaliprasanna Kavyabisharad, Mrs Besant in India: Her Stratagem and Foolishness Exposed (1894); Anon, Who Is Mrs Besant? And Why Has She Come to India? (1894); Selected Articles, Indian Social Reformer (1894-97); Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, Charles Bradlaugh: A Record of His Life and Work by His Daughter (1902); Elisabeth Severs, 'Mrs Annie Besant: Her Work for Women', Common Cause: The Organ of the Women's Movement for Reform (1911); Henry Mayers Hyndman, Further Reminiscences (1912); George Bernard Shaw, 'Mrs Besant as a Fabian Socialist', Theosophist (1917); Bipin Chandra Pal, Mrs Annie Besant: A Psychological Study (1917); Tom Mann, Tom Mann's Memoirs (1923); Malcolm Quin, Memoirs of a Positivist (1924); George Lansbury, 'Mrs Besant as a Politician', Dr Annie Besant: Fifty Years in Public Work (1924); Ben Tillett, Memories and Reflections (1931); Anon, 'Obituary of Annie Besant', Daily Express (1933); Anon, 'Obituary of Annie Besant', The Times (1933); W T Titterton, 'Annie Besant', G K's Weekly (1933); Anon, 'Mrs Frank Besant', The Guardian (1933); Esther Bright, Old Memories and Letters of Annie Besant (1936)Volume 4: Millicent Garrett FawcettEditor: Susie L SteinbachAnon, 'The Electoral Disabilities of Women', Brighton Herald (1870); The Grosvenor Papers, Female Suffrage: An Answer to Mrs Fawcett, on the Electoral Disabilities of Women (1870); Anon, 'The audience which assembled last night in the Molesworth Hall', Irish Times (1870); Anon, 'Dublin, Lecture by Mrs Fawcett', Women's Suffrage Journal (1870); Letter from J E Cairnes to Mrs Henry Fawcett (1871); Letter from E E Bowen to Mrs Henry Fawcett (1871); Alice Bell LeGeyt, 'Our English Letter', Women's Journal (1871); M E Beedy, 'Our English Letter', Women's Journal (1871); Anon, 'A Blind Statesman: Professor Fawcett and his Wife', Women's Journal (1872); Anon, 'Current Literature: Tales in Political Economy', Academy (1874); Anon, 'Women as Educators', Women's Journal (1874); M D Conway, 'Professor Fawcett', Harper's New Monthly Magazine (1875); James Stuart to Mrs Henry Fawcett (1875); Anon, 'Mrs Fawcett's Novel', The Examiner (1875); Anon, 'Janet Doncaster', The Times (1875); Anon, 'Janet Doncaster', The British Quarterly Review (1875); Anon, 'Women's Protective & Provident League', Women's Union Journal (1881); Sarah K Bolton, 'Other Famous People', Harper's Bazaar (1883); Anon, 'Obituary of Professor Fawcett', Woman's Suffrage Journal (1884); Leslie Stephen, Life of Henry Fawcett (1885); Miss Frances M Buss to Mrs Henry Fawcett (1885); W T Stead to Mrs Fawcett from Holloway Jail (1885); Baroness Burdett-Coutts to Mrs Henry Fawcett (1885); Anon, 'Interview: Mrs Millicent Garrett Fawcett', Women's Penny Paper (1888); Letter from Frances Power Cobbe to Mrs Fawcett (1888); Anon, 'Reviews: Some Eminent Women of Our Times', Women's Penny Paper (1889); Two letters from Mrs Lilias Ashworth Hallett to Mrs Henry Fawcett (1889); Louise Creighton, 'The Appeal against Female Suffrage: A Rejoinder', Nineteenth Century (1889); 'The Employment of Children in Pantomime', Four Letters to the Editor, The Times (1889); Mary Jeune, 'Children in Theatres', English Illustrated (1889); W T Stead to Mrs Fawcett, 'Proposal to found scholarship at Girton or Newnham', (1890); Advertisement for the new edition of Mary Wollstonecraft's Vindication of the Rights of Woman, with an introduction by Millicent Garrett Fawcett, The Woman's Herald (1890); Anon, 'New Publications: Some Eminent Women Of Our Times', New York Times (1890); Anon, 'Literary Notes: Some Eminent People of Our Times', The Woman's Tribune (1890); Anon [FE Garrett?], 'Millicent Garrett Fawcett & Her Daughter', Review of Reviews (1890); John F Rolph, 'Mrs Fawcett at Home', Women's World (1890); H M Stanley of Alderley to Mrs Fawcett (1891); Thomas Hardy to Mrs Fawcett (1892); Lady Frances Balfour to Mrs Fawcett (1892); Anon, 'Women's Suffrage Mrs Fawcett in Manchester', Woman's Herald (1893); Leigh Maclachlan to Millicent Garrett Fawcett (1894 ); Three letters from K Lyttelton to Millicent Garrett Fawcett (1894); Henry Cust to Millicent Garrett Fawcett Letter (1894); A J Balfour to Millicent Garrett Fawcett (1894); Dr W Armstrong to Millicent Garrett Fawcett 'Election Intelligence', Press cutting relating to the Cust scandal. Enclosed with letter (1894); Anon, 'Persons And Places: Mrs Fawcett', New York Times (1894); Anon, 'Mrs Fawcett on Women's Suffrage', Woman's Signal (1894); Anon, 'Character Sketch: Mrs Henry Fawcett', Woman's Signal (1895); Anon, 'Mrs Fawcett's Life of the Queen', Woman's Signal (1897); Anon, 'Widows of Distinguished Men: Mrs Fawcett', Woman's Life (1898); Sarah A Tooley, 'Notable Women of the Day: Millicent Garrett Fawcett', The Woman at Home (1898); Mr James Stuart to Mrs Fawcett (1898); Jennie Chappell, Noble Workers: Sketches of the Life-Work of Frances Willard, Agnes Weston, Sister Dora, Catherine Booth, The Baroness Burdett-Coutts, Lady Henry Somerset, Sarah Robinson, Mrs Fawcett, and Mrs Gladstone (1898-1903); Four letters from Lady Frances Balfour to Mrs Henry Fawcett (c.1899); Dr Elizabeth Blackwell to Mrs Fawcett (1899); Helen Blackburn to Mrs Fawcett (1899); Anon, 'Education and University Intelligence: St Andrews-Honorary Degree Conferred on Mrs Fawcett', The English Woman's Review of Social and Industrial Questions (1899); Anon, 'Suffrage meeting at Queen's Hall', The Woman's Tribune (1899); Susan B Anthony to Mrs Henry Fawcett (1900); 'Items from Boston: New Edition of Mrs Fawcett's Life of Her Majesty Queen Victoria', New York Times (1901); Anon, 'Review, Life of the Rt Hon Sir William Molesworth', Academy (1901); Mrs Arthur Lyttelton to Mrs Henry Fawcett, 'Mrs Fawcett's Commission Report. Lecture on Joan of Arc', (1902); Anon, 'Review, Life of the Rt Hon Sir William Molesworth', The Spectator (1902); Anon, 'The Commission and the Camps', Daily News (1902); Anon, 'The Camps-Ladies Committee Report Painful Disclosures: Children Burying Dead Companions', Daily News (1902); 'The Concentration Camps', Letters to the Editor from Emily Hobhouse (including an unsigned letter) and C Murray, The Times (1902); Ed Navilly to Mrs Fawcett (1902); Anon, 'The Concentration Camps', The English Woman's Review of Social and Industrial Questions (1902); Mary Chamberlain to Mrs Fawcett (1902); Three letters from Lady Frances Balfour to Mrs Henry Fawcett (1903 ); Susan B Anthony to Millicent Garrett Fawcett (1903); Anon, 'Review of Five Famous French Women', The Athenaeum (1905); Arthur and Eleanor Mildred Sidgwick, Henry Sidgwick: A Memoir (1906); Thomas Hardy to Mrs Henry Fawcett (1906); A A, 'The Suffrage', Women and Progress (1906); Emily Hill 'Review of The Case for Women's Suffrage', The English Woman's Review of Social and Industrial Questions (1907); Anon, 'Mrs Fawcett's Explanation', New York Times (1908); E T Cook, Edmund Garrett: A Memoir (1909); Edith Palliser, 'Profile of Millicent Garrett Fawcett', Common Cause (1909); Anon, 'Debate Between Mrs Humphrey Ward and Mrs Fawcett', The Times (1909); Charles L Graves, Hubert Parry: His Life and Works (1926); B A Clough, 'Obituary: Dame Millicent Fawcett, Work for Women's Education', Manchester Guardian (1929); T P O'Connor, 'Men, Women, and Memories: Dame Millicent Fawcett A Great Suffragette', Sunday Times (1929); 'Obituary: Dame M Fawcett, Suffragist, Dead', New York Times (1929); 'Obituary: Dame Millicent Fawcett. Death of Famous Suffragist Leader. Womanly Woman', Star (1929); 'The Woman Suffragist Who Was Not Militant', Public Opinion (1929); George Young, 'Letter to the Editor: Dame Millicent Fawcett', The Times (1929); 'Women's Tributes. From our London Staff', Manchester Guardian (1929); Lady Frances Balfour, Ne Obliviscaris Dinna Forget (1930); Ray Strachey, Millicent Garrett Fawcett (1931)

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