The Murder of Prime Minister Spencer Perceval  
A Portrait of the Assassin
Author(s): Martin Connolly
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781526731258
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781526731258 Price: INR 1083.99
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England entered the nineteenth century having lost the American states and was at war with France. The slave trade had been halted and the country was in torment, with industrialization throwing men and women out of work as poverty haunted their lives. As the merchants of England and America saw their businesses stagnate and profits plummet, everyone blamed the government and its policies. Those in charge were alarmed and businessmen, who were believed to be exploiting the poor, were murdered. Assassination indeed stalked the streets.

The man at the center of the storm was Prime Minister Spencer Perceval. From the higher reaches of society to the beggar looking for bread, many wanted him dead, due to policies brought about by his inflexible religious convictions and his belief that he was appointed by God. In May 1812 he entered the Lobby of the Houses of Parliament when a man stepped forward and fired a pistol at him. The lead ball entered into his heart. Within minutes he was dead.

Using freshly-discovered archive material, this book explores the assassin’s thoughts and actions through his own writings. Using his background in psychology, the author explores the question of the killer’s sanity and the fairness of his subsequent trial.

Within its pages the reader will find an account of the murder of Spencer Perceval and a well-developed portrait of his assassin.
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England entered the nineteenth century having lost the American states and was at war with France. The slave trade had been halted and the country was in torment, with industrialization throwing men and women out of work as poverty haunted their lives. As the merchants of England and America saw their businesses stagnate and profits plummet, everyone blamed the government and its policies. Those in charge were alarmed and businessmen, who were believed to be exploiting the poor, were murdered. Assassination indeed stalked the streets.

The man at the center of the storm was Prime Minister Spencer Perceval. From the higher reaches of society to the beggar looking for bread, many wanted him dead, due to policies brought about by his inflexible religious convictions and his belief that he was appointed by God. In May 1812 he entered the Lobby of the Houses of Parliament when a man stepped forward and fired a pistol at him. The lead ball entered into his heart. Within minutes he was dead.

Using freshly-discovered archive material, this book explores the assassin’s thoughts and actions through his own writings. Using his background in psychology, the author explores the question of the killer’s sanity and the fairness of his subsequent trial.

Within its pages the reader will find an account of the murder of Spencer Perceval and a well-developed portrait of his assassin.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Preface
  • Chapter 1: A Background of War and Violence
  • Chapter 2: Born Into Madness
  • Chapter 3: Marriage, Trading and Trouble
  • Chapter 4: The Sponging House and the Horse Tails
  • Chapter 5: The Leaving of Liverpool for Archangel
  • Chapter 6: Archangel to St Petersburg
  • Chapter 7: Statements of Grievances
  • Chapter 8: A Tragic Crusade
  • Chapter 9: The Normality of Madness
  • Chapter 10: The Assassin’s Justice
  • Chapter 11: I Have Only Done My Duty
  • Chapter 12: I Put Myself Upon God and My Country
  • Chapter 13: My Insanity Was Made A Matter of Public Notoriety
  • Chapter 14: I Am Perfectly Ready
  • Chapter 15: It Was From Personal Resentment – Or Was It?
  • Chapter 16: The Question of Sanity
  • Chapter 17: The Aftermath
  • Bibliography and Sources
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