Stamp Duty, Propaganda and the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars

Stamp duty on newspapers was introduced somewhat controversially in 1712, in the reign of Queen Anne, as part of a raft of revenue raising measures aimed at meeting the exigencies of the war of the Spanish Succession. The circumstances of its introduction are the subject of an earlier paper. Despite...

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Main Authors: Oats, Lynne, Sadler, Pauline
Other Authors: Professor John Tiley
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Hart Publishing 2004
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28011
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author Oats, Lynne
Sadler, Pauline
author2 Professor John Tiley
author_facet Professor John Tiley
Oats, Lynne
Sadler, Pauline
author_sort Oats, Lynne
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Stamp duty on newspapers was introduced somewhat controversially in 1712, in the reign of Queen Anne, as part of a raft of revenue raising measures aimed at meeting the exigencies of the war of the Spanish Succession. The circumstances of its introduction are the subject of an earlier paper. Despite initial enforcement difficulties and evidence of widespread evasion, the tax persisted, and over the course of the eighteenth century was subject to a number of modifications. The purpose of this paper is to explore developments in the newspaper stamp duty and associated taxes during the latter half of that century and early in the nineteenth century, the period following the French Revolution during which England was at war with France. When first introduced in 1712 it was primarily intended as a revenue raiser with censorship as a subsidiary, but not unintended, by product. The motivation for subsequent increases in stamp duty during the period under consideration is equally mixed, and difficult to discern.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-280112017-01-30T13:02:30Z Stamp Duty, Propaganda and the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars Oats, Lynne Sadler, Pauline Professor John Tiley Stamp duty on newspapers was introduced somewhat controversially in 1712, in the reign of Queen Anne, as part of a raft of revenue raising measures aimed at meeting the exigencies of the war of the Spanish Succession. The circumstances of its introduction are the subject of an earlier paper. Despite initial enforcement difficulties and evidence of widespread evasion, the tax persisted, and over the course of the eighteenth century was subject to a number of modifications. The purpose of this paper is to explore developments in the newspaper stamp duty and associated taxes during the latter half of that century and early in the nineteenth century, the period following the French Revolution during which England was at war with France. When first introduced in 1712 it was primarily intended as a revenue raiser with censorship as a subsidiary, but not unintended, by product. The motivation for subsequent increases in stamp duty during the period under consideration is equally mixed, and difficult to discern. 2004 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28011 Hart Publishing restricted
spellingShingle Oats, Lynne
Sadler, Pauline
Stamp Duty, Propaganda and the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
title Stamp Duty, Propaganda and the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
title_full Stamp Duty, Propaganda and the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
title_fullStr Stamp Duty, Propaganda and the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
title_full_unstemmed Stamp Duty, Propaganda and the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
title_short Stamp Duty, Propaganda and the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
title_sort stamp duty, propaganda and the french revolutionary and napoleonic wars
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/28011