Riots & uprisings (1575 pages found in this category)


The Monarch of the Glen (novel)

Comedy novel by Compton Mackenzie (1833–1972), portraying life in the fictional Scottish Highland estate of Glenbogle during the 1930s.

The Monthly Packet

Monthly magazine aimed at young women between 15 and 25, published from 1851 until 1899.

The Moth

Short story by H. G. Wells first published in 1895. It concerns a bitter rivalry between two entomologists, ending with the death of one and the insanity of the other.

The National Review

Right-wing British magazine founded in 1883.

The New Accelerator

Short story by H. G. Wells published in 1901, concerning the effects of a fictional drug designed to speed up the human nervous system.

The Night-Hag Visiting Lapland Witches

Oil painting by Henry Fuseli, illustrating a passage from John Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost.

The Nightmare

Oil painting by Henry Fuseli, depicting an ape-like incubus crouching on a sleeping woman, first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1782.

The Obliterated Man

Short story by H. G. Wells first published in 1895, about a shy young man who becomes a drama critic, and the effect that decision has on his personality.

The Orange and Blue

Redirected to Brocham Lom.

The Pall Mall Gazette

Evening newspaper launched in London in 1865, which introduced investigative journalism into British journalism, along with other innovations.