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Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
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Dal Segno (Paperback)
A. Isobel Sutcliffe; Edited by Andrews Randall; Illustrated by Brosinsky Edwards Karen
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R670
Discovery Miles 6 700
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Shift (Paperback)
Frank Darbe; Edited by Andrews Randall; Illustrated by Brosinsky Edwards Karen
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R650
Discovery Miles 6 500
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"The Perreaus and Mrs. Rudd" tells the remarkable story of a
complex forgery uncovered in London in 1775. Like the trials of
Martin Guerre and O.J. Simpson, the Perreau-Rudd case--filled with
scandal, deceit, and mystery--preoccupied a public hungry for
sensationalism. Peopled with such familiar figures as John Wilkes,
King George III, Lord Mansfield, and James Boswell, this story
reveals the deep anxieties of this period of English capitalism.
The case acts as a prism that reveals the hopes, fears, and
prejudices of that society. Above all, this episode presents a
parable of the 1770s, when London was the center of European
finance and national politics, of fashionable life and tell-all
journalism, of empire achieved and empire lost.
The crime, a hanging offense, came to light with the arrest of
identical twin brothers, Robert and Daniel Perreau, after the
former was detained trying to negotiate a forged bond. At their
arraignment they both accused Daniel's mistress, Margaret Caroline
Rudd, of being responsible for the crime. The brothers' trials
coincided with the first reports of bloodshed in the American
colonies at Lexington and Concord and successfully competed for
space in the newspapers. From March until the following January,
people could talk of little other than the fate of the Perreaus and
the impending trial of Mrs. Rudd. The participants told wildly
different tales and offered strikingly different portraits of
themselves. The press was filled with letters from concerned or
angry correspondents. The public, deeply divided over who was
guilty, was troubled by evidence that suggested not only that fair
might be foul, but that it might not be possible to decide which
was which.
While the decade of the 1770s has most frequently been studied in
relation to imperial concerns and their impact upon the political
institutions of the day, this book draws a different portrait of
the period, making a cause celebre its point of entry. Exhaustively
researched and brilliantly presented, it offers both a vivid
panorama of London and a gauge for tracking the shifting social
currents of the period.
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Discovery Miles 3 180
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