HIST 251: Early Modern England
Lecture 19 - Crown and Political Nation, 1604-1640. Professor Wrightson reviews the events leading up to the outbreak of the English civil wars and assesses the various historiographical interpretations that have been advanced to explain the war. He notes that while it is essential to appreciate
the various long-term causes of the conflict, we must also recognize the role of contingency in the period leading up to the war. He then describes tensions between the crown and the political nation under James I and Charles I with particular attention to the role of the Duke of Buckingham, growing dissatisfaction
with royal policy and the increasingly acrimonious tone of parliaments in the 1620s. The fresh start represented by the period of "personal rule" 1629-40 is then considered, with an emphasis on the anxiety aroused by royal financial expedients (notably Ship Money) and religious policy. He ends with the violent
response to the attempt by Charles I and Laud to impose prayer book worship on the Scottish church, which triggered the collapse of Charles attempt to rule without calling parliament.
(from oyc.yale.edu)
Lecture 19 - Crown and Political Nation, 1604-1640 |
Time | Lecture Chapters |
[00:00:00] | 1. A High Road to Civil War? |
[00:08:01] | 2. Buckingham |
[00:15:40] | 3. Five Parliaments |
[00:27:48] | 4. Dissolution of 1629 |
References |
Lecture 19 - Crown and Political Nation, 1604-1640 Instructor: Professor Keith E. Wrightson. Transcript [html]. Audio [mp3]. Download Video [mov]. |
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