• Thumbnail for The Masque of Anarchy
    The Masque of Anarchy (or The Mask of Anarchy) is a British political poem written in 1819 (see 1819 in poetry) by Percy Bysshe Shelley following the...
    18 KB (2,036 words) - 12:42, 14 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for Masque
    The masque was a form of festive courtly entertainment that flourished in 16th- and early 17th-century Europe, though it was developed earlier in Italy...
    19 KB (2,562 words) - 10:06, 8 October 2023
  • "Queen Mab" and "The Masque of Anarchy". Foot describes how Shelley, while living in Italy, heard the news of the Peterloo Massacre of 1819. Like Shelley...
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  • Sound Affects (category The Jam albums)
    poem The Masque of Anarchy. Sound Affects sold over 100,000 copies and spent 19 weeks on the UK Albums Chart, rising to number two in late 1980. In the United...
    16 KB (1,459 words) - 14:55, 27 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Maxine Peake
    Maxine Peake (category Alumni of the University of Salford)
    performances at the Royal Exchange have been directed by Sarah Frankcom with whom she also collaborated on The Masque of Anarchy in 2012 for the Manchester...
    56 KB (3,685 words) - 11:47, 1 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Christine Bottomley
    Christine Bottomley (category Alumni of the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland)
    17 June 2019. Retrieved 3 April 2022. "BBC Radio 3 - Drama on 3, The Masque of Anarchy". BBC. Retrieved 3 April 2022. "BBC Radio 4 - Drama, This Changeling...
    25 KB (1,098 words) - 09:36, 3 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ode to the West Wind
    other poems written at the same time—"The Masque of Anarchy", Prometheus Unbound, and "England in 1819"—take up these same themes of political change, revolution...
    22 KB (3,554 words) - 20:53, 27 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Percy Bysshe Shelley
    may have co-authored, and the political ballad "The Mask of Anarchy" (1819). His other major works include the verse dramas The Cenci (1819), Prometheus...
    79 KB (10,321 words) - 07:53, 21 April 2024
  • champion of peace, Mahatma Gandhi, of the "Three wise monkeys", representing the principle "see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil". The three heads...
    4 KB (356 words) - 01:47, 10 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gandhi Smriti
    Gandhi Smriti (category Assassination of Mahatma Gandhi)
    is the location where Mahatma Gandhi spent the last 144 days of his life and was assassinated on 30 January 1948. It was originally the house of the Birla...
    5 KB (558 words) - 05:07, 28 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Salt March
    Salt March (redirect from The Salt March)
    The Salt march, also known as the Salt Satyagraha, Dandi March, and the Dandi Satyagraha, was an act of nonviolent civil disobedience in colonial India...
    59 KB (6,785 words) - 05:29, 9 April 2024
  • century. The first series of what Moffat hoped would become a 42-hour televised drama following an extended family through the 20th century, was broadcast...
    26 KB (1,236 words) - 23:17, 5 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Romantic literature in English
    Romantic literature in English (category History of literature in the United Kingdom)
    Die, The Cloud, The Masque of Anarchy and Adonais, an elegy written on the death of Keats. Shelley's early profession of atheism, in the tract The Necessity...
    41 KB (5,276 words) - 16:56, 15 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gandhi Jayanti
    celebrates the day as International Day of Non-Violence. Called the "Father of The Nation" by Subhas Chandra Bose, Gandhi espoused one of the most well...
    4 KB (331 words) - 16:04, 23 January 2024
  • Karamchand Gandhi, popularly known as Mahatma Gandhi, informally The Father of the Nation in India, undertook 18 fasts during India's freedom movement...
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  • Kanu Gandhi (scientist) (category American people of Indian descent)
    from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a master's degree in civil engineering. Later he worked for NASA and United States Department of Defense...
    3 KB (207 words) - 11:31, 12 April 2023
  • Sarvodaya (category Social history of India)
    uplift" or "progress of all". The term was used by Mahatma Gandhi as the title of his 1908 translation of John Ruskin's critique of political economy, Unto...
    6 KB (769 words) - 11:05, 19 October 2023
  • had sent the list: "The... fair friend wants readers of Young India to know, if they do not already, the following seven social sins," (the list was then...
    14 KB (1,539 words) - 15:53, 2 April 2023
  • Thumbnail for Sabarmati Ashram
    Sabarmati Ashram (category Pages using the Kartographer extension)
    located in the Sabarmati suburb of Ahmedabad, Gujarat, adjoining the Ashram Road, on the banks of the River Sabarmati, 4 miles (6.4 km) from the town hall...
    16 KB (1,669 words) - 06:45, 24 September 2023
  • The three Round Table Conferences of 1930–1932 were a series of peace conferences organized by the British Government and Indian political personalities...
    25 KB (2,781 words) - 13:59, 31 March 2024
  • Harijan (magazine) (category Literature of Indian independence movement)
    during the Quit India movement of the 1940s. The newspaper aimed to support the campaign by its publisher, Harijan Sevak Sangh ("The Servants of Untouchables...
    3 KB (344 words) - 05:02, 6 January 2024
  • Tony Walsh (poet) (category Alumni of the University of Salford)
    written about earlier atrocities committed in Manchester, including The Masque of Anarchy by Percy Bysshe Shelley, on BBC Radio 4's Front Row on 24 May 2017...
    5 KB (580 words) - 21:22, 25 August 2023
  • Thumbnail for Peterloo Massacre
    Italy and did not hear of the massacre until 5 September. His poem The Masque of Anarchy, subtitled Written on the Occasion of the Massacre at Manchester...
    90 KB (9,733 words) - 04:31, 1 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Dharasana Satyagraha
    the British salt tax in colonial India in May 1930. Following the conclusion of the Salt March to Dandi, Mahatma Gandhi chose a non-violent raid of the...
    10 KB (1,247 words) - 19:52, 27 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Nonviolence
    Shelley's The Masque of Anarchy (1819) contain arguments for resisting tyranny without using violence. In 1838, William Lloyd Garrison helped found the New...
    95 KB (11,914 words) - 17:01, 18 April 2024
  • Paul Foot (journalist) (category Presidents of the Oxford Union)
    member of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP). Foot was born in Haifa during the British mandate. He was the son of Sir Hugh Foot (who was the last Governor...
    28 KB (3,107 words) - 22:20, 4 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Indian Opinion
    Indian Opinion (category History of South Africa)
    of apartheid. In the aftermath of the Boer War, the government of Boer general Jan Smuts introduced significant restrictions on the civil rights of the...
    9 KB (984 words) - 12:46, 9 February 2024
  • Sir Bysshe Shelley, 1st Baronet (category Baronets in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom)
    January 1815) was the grandfather of English Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. Shelley was born in Newark, Essex County, Province of New Jersey (present-day...
    6 KB (594 words) - 21:23, 31 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Non-cooperation movement (1919–1922)
    Non-cooperation movement (1919–1922) (category Economic history of India)
    from the British government, with the aim of persuading them to grant self-governance. This came as result of the Indian National Congress (INC) withdrawing...
    19 KB (2,213 words) - 10:57, 18 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Tolstoy Farm
    Tolstoy Farm (category Pages using the Kartographer extension)
    1910 the ashram served as the headquarters of the campaign of satyagraha against discrimination against Indians in Transvaal, where it was located. The ashram...
    3 KB (263 words) - 03:41, 29 June 2023