@article{oai:twcu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00024691, author = {今井, 宏}, issue = {1}, journal = {東京女子大學論集}, month = {Aug}, note = {This article intends to analyze the policy for the control of the press under the Cromwellian Protectorate. Part (1) which was published in the previous issue of this bulletin (vol. XIV, No.2), discussed the character of the Cromwellian order for the control of the press (August, 1655). In this issue, the author wants to offer a fuller understanding of that policy by fixing his attention on its effect on the break-down of the Protectorate. The two semi-official newspapers, "Mercurius Politicus" and "The Publick Intelligencer" survived under the rigid censorship, but it is rather strange to see that in these papers there was no vigorous enthusiasm to justify the government's policy and to increase its supporters. The author seeks the reason for the lack of such enthusiasm in the political ideas of their editor Merchamont Needham, and then suggested that the official theory of the Protectorate lost its belief in the people's commonwealth and fell into the expedient position to approve status quo. He concluded that this position strongly reflected in the Cromwellian policy for the control of the press.}, pages = {47--76}, title = {クロムウェルの言論統制(二)}, volume = {15}, year = {1964} }