Cornish rotten boroughs ended in 1832.
No, Manchester and Birmingham were not among the rotten boroughs eliminated by the Reform Act of 1832. Rotten boroughs were typically small towns or districts with very few voters but significant representation in Parliament. The Reform Act aimed to redistribute representation and address such disparities, but Manchester and Birmingham were growing industrial cities that eventually gained representation rather than being eliminated as rotten boroughs.
It changed boundaries of constituencies so that new industrial towns like Manchester were better represented and rotten boroughs ceased to exist.
The answer is ROTTEN BOROUGHS
rotten boroughs
rotten boroughs
If you could give me the clue I can give you the answer
Denbigh Boroughs - UK Parliament constituency - ended in 1918.
Flint Boroughs - UK Parliament constituency - ended in 1918.
William Cornish wrote. along with a partner, the first antislavery newspaper, Freedom's Journal
Aus-Rotten ended in 2001.
It was a rotten way to end what had been a rotten day. The fruit was rotten. The word rotten can be used as an adjective or an adverb.
The Cornish word "pen" means "head" or "end," and is commonly used in Cornish place names such as "Penzance," which means "holy headland."