Enlightenment · Europe · Politics

1695

End of English Press Licensing

1695

Parliament allowed the Licensing of the Press Act to lapse, effectively ending prior censorship of printing in England. Newspapers, pamphlets, and political squibs proliferated overnight. Within a decade, London would have a dozen newspapers and a printing trade that shaped political opinion as never before, creating the freewheeling press culture that would become a hallmark of English-speaking democracy.