1. The classic survey of crowd unrest in later-Stuart England, although now somewhat dated, is Max Beloff, Public Order and Popular Disturbances, 1660–1714 (London, 1938).
2. For a detailed analysis of propaganda and public opinion in London during the reign of Charles II, see Tim Harris, London Crowds in the Reign of Charles II: Propaganda and Politics from the Restoration until the Exclusion Crisis (Cambridge, 1987).
3. The same author takes the account up to 1688 in his ‘London Crowds and the Revolution of 1688’, in Eveline Cruickshanks (ed.), By Force or By Default? The Revolution of 1688 (Edinburgh, 1989). This should be read in conjunction with W. L. Sachse, ‘The Mob and the Revolution of 1688’, JBS, IV (1964) 23–41.
4. The London pope-burnings have been covered in two brief articles by O. W. Furley, ‘The Pope-burning Processions of the Late Seventeenth Century’, History, XLIV (1959) 16–23;
5. and Sheila Williams, ‘The Pope-burning Processions of 1679–81’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, XXI (1958) 104–18.