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- Library of Congress Subject Areas (23)
- D History General and Old World (23)
- DA Great Britain (23)
- DA670 Local history and description (23)
- DA675 London (23)
- DA670 Local history and description (23)
- DA Great Britain (23)
- D History General and Old World (23)
Number of items at this level: 19.
G
- Gray, D. (2013) Gang crime and the media in late nineteenth-century London: the Regent’s Park murder of 1888. Cultural and Social History. 10(4), pp. 559-575. 1478-0038.
- Gray, D. (2011) Contextualising the Ripper murders: poverty, crime and unrest in the East End of London, 1888. Invited Keynote presented to: Jack the Ripper Through a Wider Lens: An Interdisciplinary Conference, Bossone Research Enterprise Center, Drexel University, Philadelphia, USA, 28-29 October 2011. (Unpublished)
- Gray, D. (2010) Not catching Jack: the Metropolitan Police and the hunt for the Whitechapel murderer. Invited Presentation presented to: Raunds and District History Society, Raunds, Northamptonshire, 04 November 2010. (Unpublished)
- Gray, D. (2010) London's Shadows: the Dark Side of the Victorian City. London, England: Continuum. 9781847252425.
- Gray, D. (2009) Crime, Prosecution and Social Relations: The Summary Courts of the City of London in the Late Eighteenth Century. Basingtsoke, England: Palgrave Macmillan. 9780230203976.
- Gray, D. (2008) Not catching Jack: the Metropolitan Police and the hunt for the Whitechapel murderer. Paper presented to: University of Northampton Retired Staff Association, University of Northampton, December 2008. (Unpublished)
- Gray, D. (2008) The people's courts? Summary justice and social relations in the City of London, c.1760–1800. Family & Community History. 11(1), pp. 7-15. 1463-1180.
- Gray, D. (2008) "An example of that unity, and of that dependence of parts on each other, without which no well constructed and efficient system of police can ever be expected" : policing the city of London, c. 1780-1829. Paper presented to: European Social Science History (ESSHC) Conference, University of Lisbon, Portugal, 26 February - 1 March 2008. (Unpublished)
- Gray, D. (2007) The people’s courts? Summary justice and social relations in the City of London, c.1760-1800. Paper presented to: Urban Living: Society, Culture and Politics in the English Town, 1700-1850, University of Northampton, 5-6 July 2007. (Unpublished)
- Gray, D. (2007) The regulation of violence in the metropolis. The prosecution of assault in the summary courts, c.1780-1820. The London Journal. 32(1), pp. 75-87. 1749-6322.
- Gray, D. (2007) Bull-running, dangerous driving and the regulation of the streets of London, c.1780-1820. Paper presented to: British Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies Annual Conference, Oxford, 4-6 January 2007. (Unpublished)
- Gray, D. (2007) Settling their differences: the nature of assault and its prosecution in the City of London in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. In: Watson, K. D. (ed.) Assaulting the Past: Violence and Civilization in Historical Context. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 141-159.
M
- McCormack, M. (2005) Metropolitan 'radicalism' and electoral independence, 1760-1820. In: Cragoe, M. and Taylor, A. (eds.) London Politics, 1760-1914. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 18-37.
P
- Phillips, L. (2011) Editor. Literary London: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Representation of London. Liverpool: The Literary London Journal. 1744-0807.
- Phillips, L. (2010) What lies beneath: the London Underground and contemporary Gothic film horror. In: Phillips, L. and Witchard, A. (eds.) London Gothic: Place, Space and the Gothic Imagination. London: Continuum.
R
- Reinke-Williams, T. (2014) Women, Work and Sociability in Early Modern London. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 9781137372093.
- Reinke-Williams, T. (2011) Women's clothes and female honour in early modern London. Continuity and Change. 26(1), pp. 69-88. 0268-4160.
- Reinke-Williams, T. (2010) Women, ale and company in early modern London. Brewery History. 135, pp. 88-106.
W
- Wang, N. and Underwood, M. J. (2016) ‘Why did the relatively small Chinese community in London’s East End produce such a strong cultural reaction in late Victorian Britain?’ Should we be exploring this question in history lessons in UK schools? And if so why and how? Paper presented to: STORIES Conference, Faculty of Education, Oxford University, 15-16 March 2016. (Unpublished)