Stuart Britain: A Very Short Introduction

by John Morrill

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John Morrill shows how in the Stuart century, a century of Revolution, political, religious, social and economic changes came together.

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4 reviews
It does what it says on the tin, though for "Stuart Britain", read the Civil War. It did help me get a handle on the basics of the politics at the time (Irish secondary school history mostly deals with this period from the perspective of "That Cromwell, what a bastard", which I can't necessarily disagree with), but less so when it came to the people who inhabited Stuart Britain. For something published in 2000, this still hews very much to the Great Man school of history—emphasis on the male, for women show up hardly at all.
½
Not quite what it says on the tin. It only covers the Stuarts down to the Glorious Revolution in 1688. A good mixture of a reign by reign description of what happened and chapters following economic, social, artistic, and religious themes.
First published as part of the best-selling The Oxford Illustrated History of Britain, John Morrill's Very Short Introduction to Stuart Britain sets the Revolution into its political, religious, social, economic, intellectual, and cultural contexts. It thus seeks to integrate what most other surveys pull apart. It gives a graphic account of the effects of a century-long period during which population was growing inexorably and faster than both the food supply and the employment market. It looks at the failed attempts of successive governments to make all those under their authority obedient members of a unified national church; it looks at how Charles I blundered into a civil war which then took on a terrifying momentum of its own. The show more result was his trial and execution, the abolition of the monarchy, the house of lords, the bishops, the prayer book and the celebration of Christmas. As a result everything else that people took for granted came up for challenge, and this book shows how painfully and with what difficulty order and obedience was restored.

John Morrill has been Professor of British and Irish History at the University of Cambridge since 1998. He has also been a Fellow since 1975 and Vice master since 1994 of Selwyn College, Cambridge. His publications include The Nature of the English Revolution (1994), The British Problem 1534-1707 (1996), The Oxford Illustrated History of Tudor and Stuart Britain (1996), and Revolt in the Provinces (1998). He is also General Editor of The History of Britain, Ireland and the British Overseas on CD-ROM.
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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Stuart Britain: A Very Short Introduction
Important places
Great Britain
Important events
Stuart Era
First words
The Stuarts were one of England's least successful dynasties.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)When John Locke wrote in his second Treatise of Government (1690) that 'all men are naturally in a state of perfect freedom to order their actions and dispose of their possessions and persons as they think fit without asking the leave or depending upon the will of any man', he was proclaiming a message only made possible by the disillusionment with old ideals, but a message which was to make much possible in the decades to come.
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
History, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality
DDC/MDS
941.06History & geographyHistory of EuropeBritish IslesHistorical periods of British Isles1603-1714, House of Stuart and Commonwealth periods
LCC
DA375 .M67History of Europe, Asia, Africa and OceaniaGreat BritainHistory of Great BritainEnglandHistoryBy periodModern, 1485-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
223
Popularity
145,788
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (3.57)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5
ASINs
2