The Establishment Versus the Rotunda!
A radical history pamphlet.
The Establishment Versus the Rotunda!
Remembering 1830s London's most Notorious radical social space
In the early 1830s a building on Blackfriars Road became the most notorious radical political meeting places of its era - the heart of radical London.
The Rotunda entered its golden age in 1830, when it was taken over by freethinker Richard Carlile, and was transformed into a centre of political and scientific education and theatrical anti-religious performances... It became home to diverse radical groups and speakers, including the National Union of the Working Classes, Robert Taylor (known as the “Devil’s Chaplain’), and female atheist lecturer Eliza Sharples, the ‘Pythoness of the Temple’.
The Rotunda was feared and hated by the political establishment, who saw it as influencing all radical and rebellious opinion. The reactionary Duke Of Wellington considered the battle for the future of society as one of “The Establishment Vs The Rotunda.”
A5, 40 pages.
printed by risograph.