Anna Keay on Historic Architecture, Monarchy, and 17th Century Britain | Free Podcast Summary

Anna Keay on Historic Architecture, Monarchy, and 17th Century Britain | Conversations with Tyler In a captivating dialogue with Tyler, Anna Keay, a historian and director of the Landmark Trust, explores the cultural heritage of Great Britain, the potential…

Idea 07 of 09

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Abolition of the House of Lords

The abolition of the House of Lords wouldn’t necessarily make it harder for policy to protect heritage in Britain.

The institution is past its sell-by date and doesn’t necessarily slow down change or legislation.

I think religion was very very strongly held factor in people’s lives and you read contemporary Diaries and so on and it really is clear that people felt very strongly that wherever they were on the spectrum between a sort of absolutely kind of Calvinist Puritan or a Catholic in terms of the range that was around at the time that that personal conviction about what was right was really really a big factor. – Anna Keay

All ideas

  1. 01Anna Keay on Historic Architecture, Monarchy, and 17th Century Britain | Conversations with Tyler
  2. 02Emergence of Scientific Inquiry
  3. 03Wealth Tax and Historic Buildings
  4. 04Role of Lotteries in Heritage Preservation
  5. 05Importance of Long-Term Perspective in Preservation
  6. 06Decline of Neighborhood Architecture
  7. 07Abolition of the House of Lords
  8. 08Enduring Popularity of the British Monarchy
  9. 09Work of the Landmark Trust

Showing Abolition of the House of Lords, idea 7 of 9.