Wouldn't it be the aristocrats? They were the uppermost class, outside of royalty.
2007-03-09 11:02:07
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answer #1
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answered by Raising6Ducklings! 6
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Upper class. You would usually say Tories here but many members of the Liberals/Whigs came from the upper classes as well. Even with 19th century and early 20th century reforms the Tories and elites still dominated British politics and society and continued to do so even past the Lord's Act of 1911. Not much really changes until after WWI and even then change isn't very rapid.
2007-03-09 13:12:17
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answer #2
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answered by langstaff 3
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specific i'm beneficial the background link above provide you some, to not point out we had to bypass out of our thank you to create rules to attempt to chop back them because it particularly is whilst southern Europeans have been immigrating in to the country. Oh specific and remember approximately they have been Catholics, not protestants. humorous how in case you bypass for the period of the countries background of immigration rules they simply get adjustments whilst none protestants are arriving. If those Mexicans have been sensible they'd replace into Baptist until now they got here across the border.
2016-12-18 09:33:39
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Marx is clear on this point: the bourgeoisie is the emergent class, following the revolution of 1789.
2007-03-09 12:00:44
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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the upper class nobles as well as the merchants who were getting rich off of trade
2007-03-09 11:01:18
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answer #5
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answered by skybluu 2
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the upper class
2007-03-09 10:59:35
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answer #6
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answered by tomhale138 6
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The upper crust snob class, what..
2007-03-09 11:04:01
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answer #7
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answered by the_skipper_also 3
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