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<font size=5><b>Great Lives: Ken Loach on Gerrard Winstanley - BBCR4 - 26
Sep 2023 <br><br>
</font><h3><font size=4><b>But sadly not a lot on Pride's Purge, nor the
injustice and horrors of Charles' execution, which drove Winstanley to
act, and cleared a way for the mercantile classes' British
Empire...</i></b></font></h3><b>
<a href="https://www.bitchute.com/channel/9N5Yg4kpoQOv/" eudora="autourl">
https://www.bitchute.com/channel/9N5Yg4kpoQOv/<br><br>
</a></b>
<a href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m001qtc5" eudora="autourl">
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m001qtc5</a><br><br>
<img src="cid:.0" width=611 height=256 alt="[]"><br><br>
<a href="https://tlio.org.uk/great-lives-ken-loach-on-gerrard-winstanley-bbcr4-26-sep-2023/" eudora="autourl">
https://tlio.org.uk/great-lives-ken-loach-on-gerrard-winstanley-bbcr4-26-sep-2023/<br>
<br>
</a>Veteran British film director Ken Loach nominates the 17th century
radical pamphleteer and and leader of the Diggers, Gerrard Winstanley.
<br><br>
Born in Wigan in 1609, Winstanley began writing religious pamphlets after
his cloth selling business in London went bankrupt and he was forced to
move to the country. There his 'heart was filled with sweet thoughts ...
that the earth shall be made a common treasury of livelihood to all
mankind', for 'the great Creator Reason, made the Earth to be a Common
Treasury... for Man had Domination given to him, over the Beasts, Birds
and Fishes; but not one word was spoken in the beginning, that one branch
of mankind should rule over another." <br><br>
Winstanley began to dig a nearby wasteland, calling on others - rich and
poor -to join him in the digging, which he believed would start a
revolution and feed the poor. His ideas were radical, communal, spiritual
and deeply challenging. Within a year the Diggers had been aggressively
expelled from their site of occupation. <br><br>
The late Tony Benn called the Diggers, 'the first true socialists', but
Winstanley has also been claimed by anarchists and environmentalists.
<br><br>
With Emeritus Professor of Early Modern history, Ann Hughes. Presented by
Matthew Parris and produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Ellie Richold
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