The Real History of Tom Jones revivifies historical materials from which
Henry Fielding constructed the greatest comic novel of the eighteenth
century. This study recovers and explores the contexts necessary to
understand Fielding's subtle art, such as the bloody conflict for the
throne between Stuarts and Hanoverians, a contradictory class system,
game laws that both protected and flouted individual property rights,
and a justice system that proclaimed hanging for many crimes but let
most criminals go. Drawing on evidence such as the peculiar appearance
of eighteenth-century money, the fraudulent autobiography of a gypsy
king, and a magical prayer book illustration, the book offers new
readings of both Tom Jones and the political and legal landscape of
Georgian England.