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GRUB STREET COMMERCE: ADVERTISEMENTS AND POLITICS IN THE EARLY MODERN BRITISH PRESS.

From: The Historian  |  Date: 9/22/2000  |  Author: FURDELL, ELIZABETH LANE

In mid-May 1689 James Welwood, Scottish-born physician and polemicist for the dual monarchs William III and Mary II, inaugurated a popular journal of opinion, Mercurius Reformatus or the New Observator. Dr. Welwood's periodical was only one among the dozens of newspapers and mercuries that Londoners read after the Glorious Revolution of 1688, the culmination of events that removed James II, a Roman Catholic, from the throne and replaced him with his Protestant elder daughter Mary and ...

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