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Empire Of Hell: Religion And The Campaign To End Convict Transportation In The British Empire, 1788-1875 Hilary M. Carey

  • SKU: BELL-10642768
Empire Of Hell: Religion And The Campaign To End Convict Transportation In The British Empire, 1788-1875 Hilary M. Carey
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Empire Of Hell: Religion And The Campaign To End Convict Transportation In The British Empire, 1788-1875 Hilary M. Carey instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.29 MB
Pages: 374
Author: Hilary M. Carey
ISBN: 9781107043084, 9781108716802, 1107043085, 1108716806
Language: English
Year: 2019

Product desciption

Empire Of Hell: Religion And The Campaign To End Convict Transportation In The British Empire, 1788-1875 Hilary M. Carey by Hilary M. Carey 9781107043084, 9781108716802, 1107043085, 1108716806 instant download after payment.

Empire of Hell: Religion and the Campaign to End Convict Transportation in the British Empire, 1788–1875 by Hilary M. Carey. 2019 | ISBN: 1107043085 | English | 372 pages | PDF | 3 MB
This revisionist history of convict transportation from Britain and Ireland will challenge much that you thought you knew about religion and penal colonies. Based on original archival sources, it examines arguments by elites in favour and against the practice of transportation and considers why they thought it could be reformed, and, later, why it should be abolished. In this, the first religious history of the anti-transportation campaign, Hilary M. Carey addresses all the colonies and denominations engaged in the debate. Without minimising the individual horror of transportation, she demonstrates the wide variety of reformist experiments conducted in the Australian penal colonies, as well as the hulks, Bermuda and Gibraltar. She showcases the idealists who fought for more humane conditions for prisoners, as well as the 'political parsons', who lobbied to bring transportation to an end. The complex arguments about convict transportation, which were engaged in by bishops, judges, priests, politicians and intellectuals, crossed continents and divided an empire.

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