The Corrupt Practices During The Victorian Era

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At the beginning of the course, this question started to unfold the understanding of such an important time in history. Now, having taken our journey, we can draw an answer to it. Here goes my humble point of view about the possible justifications in which the Victorians based their proud… or not.

During the Victorian era, Britain gradually moved toward political democracy. Impediments to voting and sitting in Parliament were removed piecemeal. The three Reform Acts of 1832, 1867, and 1884 expanded the franchise. The secret ballot (1872) and the Corrupt Practices Act (1883) diminished opportunities for bribery and intimidation. The political rights gained by Catholics after 1829 and Jews after 1858 ended the principle of religious exclusion. …show more content…

It was the model for other ambitious nations empires. It was comparatively well governed. Despite some brutal military actions, the British colonial administration, once having established power, was relatively fair-minded and humane. Victorian British idealism was more than just a cover for commercial rapacity. The British ended slavery and provided education, sanitation, medicine, and other public health benefits for their colonies. The Indian Congress Party itself depended on Victorian values. The British Empire disguised Britain’s gradual loss of economic …show more content…

By the early 1800s, the continuous improvement of machinery, the growing scale of factories, the increased movement of people into factories, and the social dislocations that went with these changes helped give rise to the discipline of economics.

Architecture became a middle-class profession in the Victorian era. The demand for building was great, and the field drew imaginative figures. In addition to a surge in church building, several new types of buildings were needed, including factories, department stores, railway buildings, hotels, libraries, banks, and hospitals. Working and middle-class housing, and the beginning of suburbanization stimulated the demand for a large second rank architects. A professional association, the Institute of British Architects, was founded in 1834 and given royal endorsement in

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