History > The later Stuarts > William III (16891702) and Mary II (168994) > A new society
In the decades before, and especially following, the Glorious Revolution, profound realignments can be seen in English society. Hitherto, the great divide was between landed wealth and urban wealth derived from trade and the law. A new fault line became ever clearer within landed society, and new ties emerged between the super-rich of the city and countryside. The old social values that had tied the peerage, or nobilitas maior (greater nobility), and gentry, or nobilitas minor (lesser nobility), withered. A new social term emerged, the aristocracy. Previously it had been used to describe not a social group but a system of government; now it referred to an elite whose wealth was vicarious, encompassing not only vast estates but also great profits from urban redevelopmentsuch as the Russells' redevelopment of Covent Garden and later of Bloomsbury (from the time of Francis Russell, 4th earl of Bedford) and the Grosvenors' development of Mayfair, Belgravia, and Pimlico (from the time of Sir Thomas Grosvenor in the early 18th century). Profits also came to them from investment in overseas trading companies and from government stock. They built elegant town houses to go with their huge country houses, often pulling down or shifting whole villages (as Sir Robert Walpole did at Houghton Hall and Philip Yorke, earl of Hardwicke, did at Wimpole) so as to produce spacious parks and noble vistas for themselves. They patronized the secular arts in one sense and the squires'' (another new term for the mere gentry) in another sense. The squires faced financial decline as their rent rolls sagged and new, expensive forms of capital-intensive rather than labour-intensive agriculture passed them by. Two new political epithets were introduced: Whig aristocrat and Tory squire. They represented two social realities and two political visions: the Whig vision of a cosmopolitan, religiously and culturally liberal society and the Tory vision of a world gone bad that had abandoned the paternalism of manor house and parish church and of the confessional state and the organic society (the body politic) in favour of a materialistic possessive individualism. Post-revolution society was based much less on the rule of social leaders voluntarily leading in public service and on private philanthropy than on a rule of law made by the elite for the elite and upon the professionalism of government. These changes to the social order made many Tories temperamentally Jacobite, not in the sense that they believed in the cause of James Edward, the Old Pretender, or Charles Edward, the Young Pretender, but in the sense that they were in perpetual mourning for the world they had lost.
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·Introduction
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·Land
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·Relief
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·Drainage
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·Soils
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·Climate
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·Plant and animal life
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·People
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·Ethnic groups
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·Languages
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·Religion
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·Settlement patterns
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·Demographic trends
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·Economy
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·Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
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·Agriculture
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·Forestry
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·Fishing
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·Resources and power
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·Manufacturing
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·Finance
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·Trade
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·Services
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·Labour and taxation
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·Transportation and telecommunications
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·Government and society
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·Constitutional framework
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·Regional government
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·Local government
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·Justice
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·Political process
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·Security
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·Health and welfare
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·Housing
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·Education
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·Cultural life
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·History
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·Ancient Britain
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·Pre-Roman Britain
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·Roman Britain
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·Anglo-Saxon England
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·The invaders and their early settlements
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·The heptarchy
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·The period of the Scandinavian invasions
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·The achievement of political unity
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·The Anglo-Danish state
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·The Normans (10661154)
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·William I (106687)
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·The sons of William I
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·The period of anarchy (113554)
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·England in the Norman period
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·The early Plantagenets
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·The 13th century
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·The 14th century
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·Edward II (130727)
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·Edward III (132777)
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·Richard II (137799)
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·Economic crisis and cultural change
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·Lancaster and York
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·England under the Tudors
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·Henry VII (14851509)
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·Henry VIII (150947)
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·Edward VI (154753)
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·Mary I (155358)
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·Elizabeth I (15581603)
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·The early Stuarts and the Commonwealth
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·England in 1603
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·James I (160325)
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·Charles I (162549)
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·The later Stuarts
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·Charles II (166085)
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·James II (168588)
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·William III (16891702) and Mary II (168994)
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·Anne (170214)
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·18th-century Britain, 17141815
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·The state of Britain in 1714
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·Britain from 1715 to 1742
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·Britain from 1742 to 1754
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·British society by the mid-18th century
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·Britain from 1754 to 1783
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·Britain from 1783 to 1815
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·Great Britain, 18151914
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·Britain after the Napoleonic Wars
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·Early and mid-Victorian Britain
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·State and society
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·The political situation
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·Economy and society
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·Cultural change
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·Late Victorian Britain
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·State and society
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·The political situation
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·Britain from 1914 to the present
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·The political situation
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·World War I
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·Between the wars
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·World War II
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·Britain since 1945
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·Labour and the welfare state (194551)
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·Economic crisis and relief (1947)
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·Withdrawal from the empire
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·Conservative government (195164)
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·Labour interlude (196470)
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·The return of the Conservatives (197074)
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·Labour back in power (197479)
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·Thatcherism (197990)
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·John Major (199097)
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·New Labour and after (since 1997)
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·Society, state, and economy
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·Sovereigns of Britain
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·Prime ministers of Great Britain and the United Kingdom
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·Additional Reading
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·Geography
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·History
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