Staff Profiles
Professor Rachel Hammersley
Professor of Intellectual History
- Email: rachel.hammersley@ncl.ac.uk
- Telephone: +44 (0) 191 208 6698
- Personal Website: http://www.rachelhammersley.com
- Address: School of History, Classics & Archaeology,
Armstrong Building,
Newcastle University,
Newcastle Upon Tyne,
NE1 7RU
As an intellectual historian, I am particularly interested in past political ideas: their development; dissemination, circulation and influence. My work to date has largely focused on political concepts such as republicanism, democracy, and revolution - and has explored how these were understood in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, particularly in Britain and France; the means by which they were disseminated to new audiences; and the ways in which they were transformed in the process. A lot of my work has centred on the English Revolution (1640-1660) and the French Revolution (1789-1799) as well as on the ideas and institutions of the Enlightenment. In 2019 I published an intellectual biography of the seventeenth-century political thinker James Harrington (https://global.oup.com/academic/product/james-harrington-9780198809852?cc=us&lang=en&). It seeks to move beyond the conventional view of Harrington as primarily a republican thinker, offering a broader and more comprehensive account of him which addresses the complexity of his republicanism as well as exploring his contributions to economic, historical, religious, philosophical and scientific debates; his experimentation with vocabulary and literary form; and the relationship between his life and thought. I have also recently published a textbook on Republicanism with Polity Press (https://politybooks.com/bookdetail/?isbn=9781509513413) which is designed to offer an accessible contribution to that complex topic.
My previous monograph The English Republican Tradition and Eighteenth-Century France: Between the Ancients and the Moderns (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2010) challenged the common view of France as the revolutionary nation. It showed that that despite their frequent claims to be starting afresh, the French revolutionaries of the 1790s made much use of earlier models and ideas, not least those of seventeenth-century English republican writers whose works had exercised an influence on French thinkers, writers and political activists throughout the eighteenth century. More details of my research and publications can be found on my personal website: http://www.rachelhammersley.com
PhD Supervision
I have supervised the following graduate students to completion:
Meg Kobza - The Social History of the Eighteenth-Century London Masquerade.
Tom Whitfield - Liberty, Property and Materiality - An Historical Archaeology of Later Eighteenth-Century Protest in NorthEast England. (AHRC-funded).
Amy Shields - Republicanism in a European Context: The Influence of the Dutch and Venetian Republics on Seventeenth-Century English Thought. (AHRC-funded).
Sam Petty - ‘"That Colonies have their Warrant from God"- English Protestant thought and theories of colonisation in the seventeenth-century.'
Fred Milton - 'Children's Columns in the Nineteenth-Century Press.' (AHRC-funded).
I am currently supervising the following PhD students:
Leanne Smith - 'No King but Jesus': The Fifth Monarchist's Idea of a Christian Commonwealth (AHRC-funded)
Lauren Dudley - Hubert Robert (1733-1808) and the French Revolution: Republican Landscapes and the National Museum.
Harriet Palin - Educating England: Learning & Living the Faith - An Examination of Religious Education in Sixteenth & Seventeenth-Century England
Alex Plane - 'Reconstructing the Library of James VI and I' (AHRC CDA project)
I welcome inquiries from prospective postgraduate students wanting to work on intellectual history, particularly as regards seventeenth or eighteenth-century Britain or France.
Memberships and Honorary Appointments
Fellow of the Royal Historical Society
Editorial Board member for The History of European Ideas
Editorial Board member for Global Intellectual History
Google scholar: Click here.
SCOPUS: Click here.
Current Research
I have recently published an intellectual biography of the seventeenth-century English political thinker James Harrington. Harrington is a fascinating character whose life and works embody the complex and contested web of political beliefs that lay at the heart of the English Revolution (1640-1660). He is best known today as one of the leading republican thinkers of the period thanks to his book The Commonwealth of Oceana (1656) which, among other things, provided a blueprint for a durable English republic. Yet Harrington was also a loyal and affectionate servant to King Charles I in 1647-8 when he was being held captive by Parliament. Part of the aim of my book is to explore how these two facets of Harrington's life can be reconciled, but it will also bring to greater prominence other neglected aspects of his life and work, such as his contribution to developing ideas about democracy - and his engagement in historical, religious, and philosophical debates.
I am also a Co-I on an AHRC-Funded project entitled 'Wastes and Strays: The Past, Present and Future of Urban English Commons'. In this project I will be working alongside Chris Rodgers from the Newcastle Law School (PI); Alessandro Zambelli, who works in the School of Architecture and Design at the University of Brighton; Emma Cheatle from the Architecture Department at Sheffield University; and John Clarke from the English Department at Exeter University. The project sets out to explore common land in urban areas with a particular focus on four case studies: the Town Moor, Newcastle upon Tyne; Valley Gardens, Brighton; Mousehold Heath, Norwich; and Clifton Down, Bristol. I am responsible for the 'Past' element of the project and will work with a postdoctoral research assistant to examine the historical and archaeological records relating to these case studies. Alessandro Zambelli has written a helpful summary of the project.
Undergraduate Teaching
I am module leader for the following modules:
HIS 2319 Reformation and Revolution: Tudors to Georgians
HIS 3204 The English Revolution, 1640-1660.
I also supervise undergraduate dissertations on early modern British and French history and teach on other modules including the core course for Stage 2 students on the English and History joint degree.
Postgraduate Teaching
MA in British History.
MA in European History.
- Hammersley R. James Harrington: An Intellectual Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019.
- Hammersley R. Presbyterians, Republicans, and Democracy in Church and State, ca. 1570-1660. In: Cuttica, C; Peltonen, M, ed. Democracy and Anti-democracy in Early Modern England 1603-1689. Leiden: Brill, 2019, pp.174-193.
- Hammersley R. Concepts of Citizenship in France During the Long Eighteenth Century. European Review of History: Revue européenne d'histoire 2015, 22(3), 468-485.
- Hammersley R. James Harrington, The Commonwealth of Oceana and a Revolution in the Language of Politics. In: Hammersley, R, ed. Revolutionary Moments: Reading Revolutionary Texts. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2015, pp.19-26.
- Hammersley R. Political Thought, History of. In: International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences: Second Edition. Oxford: Elsevier, 2015, pp.486-490.
- Hammersley R, ed. Revolutionary Moments: Reading Revolutionary Texts. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2015.
- Hammersley R. Spencer's Property in Land Every One's Right: Problems and Solutions. In: Alastair Bonnett and Keith Armstrong, ed. Thomas Spence: The Poor Man's Revolutionary. Breviary Stuff, 2014.
- Hammersley R. Rethinking the Political Thought of James Harrington: Royalism, Republicanism and Democracy. History of European Ideas 2013, 39(3), 354-370.
- Hammersley R. Introduction: The Historiography of Republicanism and Republican Exchanges. History of European Ideas 2012, 38(3), 323-337.
- Hammersley R. 'Special issue of (editor) - and intro. Republican Exchanges 2012. In Preparation.
- Hammersley R. The English Republican Tradition and Eighteenth-Century France: Between the Ancients and the Moderns. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2010.
- Hammersley R. La France contre l'Angleterre, tout contre, ou lire les textes des republicains anglais au temps du Directoire. In: Serna, P, ed. Republiques soeurs: Le Directoire et la Revolution atlantique. Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2009, pp.205-218.
- Hammersley R. French Revolutionaries and English Republicans: The Cordeliers Club, 1790-1794. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2005.
- Hammersley R. From Constitution-Builders to Radical Democrats: Neo-Harringtonians in Eighteenth-Century America and France. 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 2005, 11, 315-343.
- Hammersley R. Jean-Paul Marat's The chains of slavery in Britain and France, 1774-1833. Historical Journal 2005, 48(3), 641-660.
- Hammersley R. The Commonwealth of Oceana de James Harrington: un modele pour la France revolutionnaire?. Annales Historiques de la Revolution Francaise 2005, 342(4), 3-20.
- Hammersley R. English Republicanism in Revolutionary France: the case of the Cordelier Club. Journal of British Studies 2004, 43(4), 464-481.
- Hammersley R. Camille Desmoulins’s Le Vieux Cordelier: a link between English and French republicanism. History of European Ideas 2001, 27(2), 115-132.