| LUDDITE | What name was given to a rioting machine-wrecker of the early 19th century? (7) |
| HCL | Wrecker of the budget: Abbr. |
| TUMULT | Commotion as of a rioting mob |
| ANATHEMA | Curse a rioting man stealing articles (8) |
| RIGATONI | Pasta for a rioting group |
| BROWNIE | According to folklore, what name was given to little brown goblins, especially those who helped with the housework; the name was also used for the junior division of the Girl Guides? (7) |
| DAVIDRICARDO | British economist and politician of the early 19th century, a former Owner of Gatcombe Park, Gloucestershire (5,7) |
| STENDHAL | Pen-name of the early 19th century French novelist Marie-Henri Beyle (8) |
| SCHOOLOFTHEAIR | What name was given to a network that used the broadcast services of the Royal Flying Doctor to comp |
| PROFUMOAFFAIR | What name was given to the 1963 security scandal when the British Secretary of State for War had an affair with Christine Keeler. the mistress of a Soviet diplomat? (7,6) |
| NAPOLEON | --- Bonaparte, military and political French leader of the early 19th Century (8) |
| HAZLITT | William ---, English critic and essayist of the early 19th Century (7) |
| LANDGIRL | What name was given to a woman doing farm work to support the war effort during the Second World War? (4,4) |
| RANJITSINGH | The "Lion of Punjab", a Sikh empire leader of the early 19th century |
| LAKEPOETS | Literary group of the early 19th century that comprised Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Robert Southey and William Wordsworth (4,5) |
| SNUFF | What powdered substance was popular in England from the 17th to the early 19th century? (5) |
| MACARONI | What name was given to a dandy affecting foreign manners in 18th-century Britain? (8) |
| ZERO | What name was given to a Mitsubishi made single-seat fighter aircraft of WWII? (4) |
| SINGAPORE | Now a city-state, it was founded by Stamford Raffles of the East India Company in the early 19th century (9) |
| SWAZI | Anglicised name of the southern African people who, under Sobhuza I and his son Mswati II, established a nation now known as Eswatini in the early 19th century (5) |