Members of two opposing political parties or factions
in England, particularly during the 18th century. Originally "Whig" and
"Tory" were terms of abuse introduced in 1679 during the heated struggle
over the bill to exclude James, Duke of York (afterward James II), from
the succession. Whig--whatever its origin in Scottish Gaelic--was a term
applied to horse thieves and, later, to Scottish Presbyterians; it connoted
nonconformity and rebellion and was applied to those who claimed the power
of excluding the heir from the throne. Tory was an Irish term suggesting
a papist outlaw and was applied to those who supported the hereditary right
of James despite his Roman Catholic faith.
The Revolution of 1688 greatly modified the division
in principle between the two parties, for it had been a joint achievement.
Thereafter most Tories accepted something of the Whig doctrines of limited
constitutional monarchy rather than divine-right absolutism. Under Queen
Anne, the Tories represented the resistance, mainly by the country gentry,
to religious toleration and foreign entanglements. Toryism became identified
with Anglicanism and the squirearchy and Whiggism with the aristocratic,
landowning families and the financial interests of the wealthy middle classes.
The death of Anne in 1714, the manner in which
George I came to the throne as a nominee of the Whigs, and the flight (1715)
of the Tory leader Henry St. John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke, to France,
conspired to destroy the political power of the Tories as a party.
For nearly 50 years thereafter, rule was by aristocratic
groups and connections, regarding themselves as Whigs by sentiment and
tradition. The die-hard Tories were discredited as Jacobites, seeking the
restoration of the Stuart heirs to the throne, though about 100 country
gentlemen, regarding themselves as Tories, remained members of the House
of Commons throughout the years of the Whig hegemony. As individuals and
at the level of local politics, administration, and influence, such "Tories"
remained of considerable importance.
The reign of George III (1760-1820) brought a shift
of meanings to the two words. No Whig Party as such existed at the time,
only a series of aristocratic groups and family connections operating in
Parliament through patronage and influence. Nor was there a Tory Party,
only Tory sentiment, tradition, and temperament surviving among certain
families and social groups. The so-called King's Friends, from whom George
III preferred to draw his ministers (especially under Lord North [afterward
2nd earl of Guilford], 1770-82), came from both traditions and from neither.
Real party alignments began to take shape only after 1784, when profound
political issues that deeply stirred public opinion were arising, such
as the controversy over the U.S. War of Independence.
After 1784 William Pitt the Younger emerged as
the leader of a new Tory Party, which broadly represented the interests
of the country gentry, the merchant classes, and official administerial
groups. In opposition, a revived Whig Party, led by Charles James Fox,
came to represent the interests of religious dissenters, industrialists,
and others who sought electoral, parliamentary, and philanthropic reforms.
The French Revolution and the wars against France
soon further complicated the division between parties. A large section
of the more moderate Whigs deserted Fox and supported Pitt. After 1815
and a period of party confusion, there eventually emerged the conservatism
of Sir Robert Peel and Benjamin Disraeli, earl of Beaconsfield, and the
liberalism of Lord John Russell and William Ewart Gladstone, with the party
labels of Conservative and Liberal assumed by each faction, respectively.
Although the label Tory has continued to be used to designate the Conservative
Party, Whig has ceased to have much political meaning.
Copyright 1994-1998 Encyclopaedia Britannica
Academic
Year 00-01
07/02/2001
©a.r.e.a.
Dr. Vicente Forés López
©Ana
Aroa Alba Cuesta
Universitat
de València Press