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Soldiers, Writers and Statesmen of the English Revolution

A collection of essays about major aspects of the 'English Revolution' of the mid-seventeenth century.

Ian Gentles (Edited by), John Morrill (Edited by), Blair Worden (Edited by)

9780521038751, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 16 August 2007

356 pages
23.4 x 15.6 x 1.9 cm, 0.509 kg

'The volume is equally strong on both the 1640s and 1650s and embraces political history, military history, and the history of ideas … it pulls together an impressive range of work by younger scholars many of whom were completing, or had just completed, their doctoral theses at the time of writing. In quite a few cases, these papers were the forerunners for major monographs that have subsequently appeared, and this gives the volume considerable value as an overview of recent research in the field.' Historical Journal

This collection of essays examines the struggles of the people of England with the collapse of civilization as they knew it. As the country fell into civil war and near anarchy, the people sought out in word and action how to preserve what could still be preserved or to create new political, religious and social certainties. The authors discuss individuals or groups who were soldiers, writers or statesmen of the Civil Wars or the Interregnum, people who were at the centre of power or in more humble and localized circumstances. All of the authors take their inspiration from the work of Austin Woolrych, whose own books and articles focus on these very questions. This volume is published in his honour.

Frontispiece
Preface John Morrill
Austin Woolrych: an appreciation Lesley le Claire
1. Secret alliance and Protestant agitation in two kingdoms: the early Caroline background to the Irish rebellion of 1641 John Reeve
2. Of armies and architecture: the employments of Robert Scawen John Adamson
3. George Digby, Royalist intrigue and the collapse of the cause Ian Roy
4. The iconography of revolution: England 1642–9 Ian Gentles
5. The casualties of war: treatment of the dead and wounded in the English Civil War Barbara Donagan
6. 'A bastard kind of militia', localism, and tactics in the second civil war Sarah Barber
7. Cromwell's commissioners for preserving the peace of the Commonwealth: a Staffordshire case study John Sutton
8. Colonel Gervase Benson, Captain John Archer and the corporation of Kendal, c.1644–55 C. B. Phillips
9. Repacifying the polity: the responses of Hobbes and Harrington to the 'crisis of the common law' Glenn Burgess
10. Equality in an unequal commonwealth: James Harrington's republicanism and the meaning of equality J. C. Davis
11 John Milton and Oliver Cromwell Blair Worden
12. From pillar to post: Milton and the attack on republican humanism at the Restoration Nicholas von Maltzahn
13. 'They that pursew perfaction on earth …': the political progress of Robert Overton Barbara Taft
14. Locke no Leveller G. E. Aylmer
A bibliography of the writings of Austin Woolrych, 1955–95 Sara Coombs
Index.

Subject Areas: Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700 [HBLH], British & Irish history [HBJD1]

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