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Britain: The Puritan Revolution

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Title: Britain: The Puritan Revolution


1
Section 4.19
  • Britain The Puritan Revolution

2
Questions to Consider
  • What comparisons may be made between events in
    England in the 17th century and developments on
    the Continent?
  • Why did Parliament come into conflict with James
    I? with Charles I? How did the special nature of
    Parliament make its resistance effective? How did
    the civil war begin? How did Cromwell emerge as
    ruler of England?
  • Describe the government of England under the
    Commonwealth and the Protectorate. What is meant
    by the regime of the major generals?
  • What policies did Cromwell follow toward
    Scotland? Toward Ireland? In foreign affairs?
    Toward the more radical elements emerging in
    England?
  • How would you evaluate Cromwells role in English
    history?

3
Terms to Know
  • Puritan
  • Presbyterian
  • Anglican
  • James VI of Scotland
  • True Law of Free Monarchy
  • Tunnage and poundage
  • Archbishop Laud
  • Prerogative courts
  • Ship money case
  • Long Parliament
  • Solemn League and Covenant
  • Roundheads
  • Prides Purge
  • The Rump
  • Levelers
  • Diggers
  • Instrument of Government

4
Introduction
  • 1648 England embroiled in a civil war
  • Not at Westphalia
  • Viewed as mild variation of the Wars of Religion
  • Causes of English Revolution
  • Religion Political power POOPOO KAAKAA
  • Extreme Protestant Calvinists (Puritans) v.
    moderate Protestant (Anglicans)
  • Monarchy v. Parliament
  • Wars relatively mild
  • Wars between England and Ireland are savage

5
In-coming!!!!
6
England in the Seventeenth Century
  • Age of expansion
  • Pop. 4-5 mil in 1600
  • Religious discontent led to migration
  • Puritan migration to New England and the
    Caribbean
  • 40, 000 total
  • Scots settle in Ireland
  • Catholics in Maryland
  • Anglicans in Virginia

7
England in the Seventeenth Century
  • Laissez faire policy in pre 1650 migration
  • After 1650 adopts policy of state directed
    colonization
  • take NY from Dutch, Pa, Carolinas, Jamaica taken
    from Spain

8
English culture blossoms
  • Shakespeare/Milton
  • Rugged in form deep in content
  • English could not yield to French standards
  • Sir Christopher Wren

9
England in the Seventeenth Century Continued
  • Economic Activity
  • 1660 outdistanced by the Dutch
  • had a larger and more productive population
  • didnt depend exclusively on seafaring
  • Coal for industry is available
  • Sheep and woolens were main export
  • Putting out system used
  • 1600 East India Company
  • Wealth was still tied to the land

10
Background to the Civil War Parliament and the
Stuart Kings
  • New Monarchs clashed with medieval representative
    institutions
  • 1588 the monarchy is powerful
  • 1688 the Parliament is powerful
  • In most places that popular institutions (estates
    general) won out anarchy followed
  • Uniqueness of Englands workable solution
    ushered in the modern institutions of liberalism
    and representative institutions

11
Background to the Civil War Parliament and the
Stuart Kings Continued
  • 1603 Elizabeth I died with no heir
  • James the IV of Scotland
  • son of Mary Stuart
  • became James I of England uniting Scotland and
    England under one crown (Protestant)
  • Absolutist as a father taking care of family
  • Called the wisest fool in Christendom
  • Wrote book called The True Law of Free Monarchy
  • Free meant free to rule as he pleased
  • Adopted the theory of the Divine right of kings

12
Background to the Civil War Parliament and the
Stuart Kings Continued
  • Begins to lecture Parliament on the royal rights
  • Said he should not have to ask for money
  • Wars with Spain left big debt and James wasnt
    thrifty
  • Tunnage and poundage
  • right of king to collect fixed income on
    imports/exports

13
Background to the Civil War Parliament and the
Stuart Kings Continued
  • Puritan Parliament refused to accommodate
  • Disliked doctrine of Anglican Church
  • Being forcefully pushed by Laud
  • Discontent with prerogative courts like the Star
    Chamber
  • Puritans were property owners and wanted
    protection

William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury
14
Background to the Civil War Parliament and the
Stuart Kings Continued
  • Parliament
  • single representative body for all of England
  • unlike Dutch, Spain, France, Germany or Poland
    with local estates
  • landed interests controlled both houses nobles
    and gentry
  • HOC was mixed with merchant interests
  • Secularized as no Abbots remained in either house
  • the strong make up of Parliament forced Kings to
    submit to its will
  • came to a deadlock in 1629 as Charles I attempted
    to ignore Par

15
Ship money dispute
  • Traditionally coastal towns provided ships in
    time of war
  • Mid 1600 they paid taxes instead
  • Charles I needed money
  • Extends medieval policy of ship money to all
    towns in England not just coastal cities
  • An absolutist view of power

16
Ship money dispute
  • Parliament (most lived inland) resist new tax
    without its consent
  • 1637 Scotland rebels
  • Scots rioted against Anglicizing their country
  • Short Parliament
  • In 1640 Charles called Parliament for
  • it refuses his demands
  • Charles I dissolved the Parliament, called for
    new elections and the same members are returned
  • Long Parliament
  • same body of members sat for 20 years
  • are known as the Long Parliament
  • landowners with merchant support

17
Ship money dispute Continued
  • Long Parliament (1640-1660)
  • Does not assist the King against the Scots but
    uses it to get their demands through
  • Demanded royal advisers be removed and put to
    death
  • Abolished the Star Chamber
  • Abolished bishops (Calvinist view against clergy)

18
Ship money dispute Continued
  • Solemn League and Covenant
  • made Presbyterianism established religion of
    England, Scotland, and Ireland

19
The Emergence of Cromwell
  • Roundhead (Puritans) defeated the royalists
  • Close haircuts of the Puritans
  • Oliver Cromwell organized a military force to
    advance the Puritan effort
  • More effective military (called the Ironsides)
    religiously motivated
  • Army is of more popular
  • made up than Parliament and demand broader
    religious policies

20
The Emergence of Cromwell
  • Cromwell called for the execution of Charles I
    for treason
  • Parliament resists
  • Cromwell purges the Parliament to a Rump with
    the army
  • had 500 members in 1640 and sunk to 150 in 1649
  • Cromwell reduced it to 50-60
  • called this operation Prides Purge (after
    Puritan general in charge of intimidating
    Parliament)
  • 1649 King is condemned of treason and executed
    regicide in 1649
  • British Isles declared a republican commonwealth

21
Cromwell Foreign and Domestic Policy
  • Cromwell subdues Ireland and Scotland by force
  • Scots not pleased with Stuart execution (he was a
    Scot)
  • Ireland
  • Protestants were massacre in 1641 in Ulster
  • Garrisons of Wexford and Drogheda are massacred
    by Cromwell
  • Priests, as well as women and children
    dispatched in cold blood
  • Protestants now take over aristocracy of entire
    island (not just Ulster) (mostly absentee
    landlords)
  • Redistributed land to adventurers that ruled in
    absence
  • Cromwell was more successful abroad
  • Ireland, Navigation Act of 1651, maritime attack
    on the Dutch, preying on the Spanish empire

22
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23
Religious and Social Radicalism
  • In domestic affairs Cromwell had to continually
    become more strident
  • Levellers (liberal and popular) ask for universal
    male suffrage, a constitution, and equal
    representation
  • led by John Lilburne (civilian)
  • George Fox founded the Society of Friends or
    Quakers
  • insisted that believers can have revelations of
    spiritual truth and rejected hierarchies
  • Diggers rejected the idea of property

24
Protectorate
  • As a regicide (King killer) he cannot turn to the
    royalist (conservative and elite)
  • 1653 Cromwell bans Parliament and becomes Lord
    Protector
  • Provides a constitution Instrument of
    Government
  • In reality military dictatorship
  • Closed ale houses, prohibited cock fighting
  • 1658 Cromwell dies and his son is unable to
    maintain the Protectorate

25
Legacy of Revolution
  • Reactionary
  • 1660 the crown in restored Restoration with
    Charles II
  • Religious intolerance was equated thereafter with
    military dictatorship
  • Excess democracy or levelling is considered
    abhorrent and popular interests are abandoned
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