<i>The nineteenth-century present</i> explores the multiple ways in which history was understood structured and reassessed in literary theological and political contexts across the nineteenth century. While the scope of the book is wide ranging from the representations of geological time and ancient history to the writing of the recent past and covering the work of writers from Walter Scott to G.K. Chesterton each chapter reveals how present concerns intrude on and shape every view of history. Ultimately the collection emphasises that issues raised regarding historicity in recent methodological debates were already concerns in the nineteenth century.