The great rivalry : Gladstone & Disraeli
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The great rivalry : Gladstone & Disraeli
I.B.Tauris, 2013
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The great rivalry : Gladstone and Disraeli
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Note
Bibliography: p. 215-218
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Benjamin Disraeli and William Ewart Gladstone are without doubt the two most iconic figures of Victorian politics. Their distinctly different personalities and policies led to 28 years of bitter political rivalry. For the first time, this book provides the full story of their rivalry and its origins, comparing the upbringing, education and personalities of the two leaders, as well as their political careers. Dick Leonard considers the impact of religion on the two men, their contrasting oratorical skills, their attitudes to political and social reform, foreign affairs and imperialism as well as their relations with Queen Victoria. In their private lives he sheds new light on Gladstone's guilt-ridden obsession with 'reforming' prostitutes, and Disraeli's almost completely successful efforts to conceal the existence of two illegitimate children. Providing important new perspectives on the two towering political characters of the Victorian Age, this book will be essential reading for anyone interested in nineteenth century British history and politics.
Table of Contents
Prologue - the events of 16-17 December 1852.
1. Benjamin Disraeli - early and middle life, 1804-1852.
2. William Gladstone - early and middle life, 1809-1852.
3. Three decades of rivalry - 1853-1881.
4. Gladstone alone, 1881-1898.
Epilogue - two living legacies
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