ABSTRACT

The ‘celebrated’ Catharine Macaulay was both lauded and execrated during the eighteenth century for her republican politics and her unconventional, second marriage. This comprehensive biography in the 'life and letters' tradition situates her works in their political and social contexts and offers an unprecedented, detailed account of the content and influence of her writing, the arguments she developed in her eight-volume history of England and her other political, ethical, and educational works. Her disagreements with conservative opponents, David Hume, Edmund Burke, and Samuel Johnson are developed in detail, as is her influence on more progressive admirers such as Thomas Jefferson, Jacques-Pierre Brissot, Mercy Otis Warren, and Mary Wollstonecraft.

Macaulay emerges as a coherent and influential political voice, whose attitudes and aspirations were characteristic of those enlightenment republicans who grounded their progressive politics in rational religion. She looked back to the seventeenth-century levellers and parliamentarians as important precursors who had advocated the liberty and political rights she aspired to see implemented in Great Britain, America, and France. Her defence of republican liberty and the equal rights of men offers an important corrective to some contemporary accounts of the character and origins of democratic republicanism during this crucial period.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|21 pages

The Formation of a Female Republican

Kent, 1731–60

chapter 2|35 pages

Influences from the Scottish Enlightenment

St James’s Place, 1760–66

chapter 3|32 pages

A Republican Coterie

Berners St, 1766–70

chapter 4|26 pages

Wilkes, Fever, and Wilson

London and Bath, 1771–77

chapter 5|14 pages

France, Marriage, and Scandal

1777–79

chapter 6|36 pages

Completion of the History and Emergence as a Moral Philosopher

Knightsbridge, 1780–84

chapter 7|8 pages

America and France

1784–86

chapter 8|30 pages

On Education and the French Revolution

Binfield, Berkshire, 1787–91

chapter 9|26 pages

Macaulay’s Lasting Significance