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LAND OF ROGUES & SCOUNDRELS IBD

EDWARD EVERETT ROOT PUBLISHERS
04 / 2025
9781915115393
Inglés

Sinopsis

This landmark new book is the culmination of Alison AlexanderâÇÖs pioneering research into how immigrants started out in Australia, and how they developed the land and society.The people featured here are all âÇÖthe biggest rogues and scoundrels in the worldâÇÖ, wrote William Williamson in Hobart in 1820 - though, having robbed his sister of every penny she possessed, he was just as much a rogue as any.Alison Alexander shows how a heterogeneous jumble of British convicts, guards and free settlers like Williamson established a functioning society where people could live in reasonable security and comfort.áFirst settlers arriving here aimed to recreate life in Britain, with an elite ruling, a small middle class and the lower-class doing what they were told, either convict or free.áBut the upper-class members were so corrupt, the opportunities for the lower-class so good, that they created a parody or England, or an inversion, this society coming to a head under the ludicrous rule of the drunken, dissolute but gentleman Lt.Gov. Thomas Davey.Governor Arthur arrived in 1824 and established law and order but it was too late. By their behaviour the elite had lost their position and the lower class had gained it, to form a more egalitarian society.For tens of thousands of years the island of lutrawita [Van DiemenâÇÖs Land/Tasmania) had been home to Aboriginal people, living as nomads and hunter-gatherers. But this was not the way the British lived. They seized the AboriginesâÇÖ land - and did what?They arrived in a colony virtually untouched by humans. Somehow they had to find a way of life. This new book shows how in 1804 they started from scratch: mainly farming, with some merchants, tradesmen and public servants. It was a rough pioneer society, and people tried to make a living in any way they could, by hook or by crook. There were few restraining influences such as clergymen, teachers, effective police or women. People were largely free to rob, lie, cheat, plunder, even kill as they wished (or felt necessary). Fleecing the British government was especially popular. Yet by 1831 (when this book closes) a viable British society existed.

PVP
128,91