Spectres of John Ball: The Peasants’ Revolt in English Political History, 1381-2020 – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9781800501362,1800501366
Product details:
- ISBN-10 : 1800501358
- ISBN-13 : 978-1800501355
- Author:
For centuries, the priest John Ball was one of the most infamous or famous figures in the history of English rebels, best known for his saying ‘When Adam delved and Eve Span, Who was then the gentleman’. But over the past hundred years his memory has faded dramatically. Along with Wat Tyler, Ball was one of the leaders of the Peasants’ Revolt of 1381, a historically remarkable event in that leading figures of the realm were beheaded by the rebels. For a few days in June 1381, the rebels dominated London but soon met their demise, with Ball executed. Ball provided the theological justification for the uprising which he saw in apocalyptic terms. After the revolt, he was soon vilified and received an overwhelmingly hostile press for 400 years as an archetypal enemy of the state and a religious zealot. His reputation was rescued from the end of the eighteenth century onward and for over one hundred years he rivalled Robin Hood and Wat Tyler as a great English folk (and even abolitionist) hero. But his 640-year reception involves much more, of course, and is tied up with the story of what England is or could be.
Table of contents:
1 Introduction: 1381
2 The Quest for the Historical John Ball
3 Exit Ball: Late Medieval Receptions
4 Ball and the English Reformation
5 Ghosts of 1381: Uneasy Heresies, Radicalisms, and Discontents in Late Elizabethan and Early Jacobean England
6 The Priest of Baal in Revolutionary England
7 Perverted Liberty and the End of Stuart England: Ball among Whigs, Tories, Jacobites, and Other Mobs
8 Georgian John: From Mob Rule to Reasonable Demands
9 Revolution, Once Again: A Freeborn Englishman in the Late Eighteenth Century
10 The Second Coming of John Ball: John Baxter, Robert Southey, and 1790s Radicalism
11 After Waterloo: The Poet Laureate’s John Ball
12 ‘Peaceably If We May, Forcibly If We Must’: Ball among the Chartists
13 Haranguing after Chartism: The Making of the Victorian Ball
14 Class Struggle among the Historians
15 William Morris: Delaying Ball’s New World
16 Still Dreaming of John Ball
17 Red John? Ball after the Great War
18 Bolshevik Ball
19 Cold War Ball
20 Rodney Hilton: Ball at the End of Historical Materialism?
21 Ball after 1968
22 1381/1981
23 Twenty-First Century Ball
24 Epilogue