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Charles I

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Title: Charles I


1
  • Charles I
  • After James I died, Charles I inherited throne
    (1625)
  • Physically weak didnt walk until 7 and
    severe speech impediment
  • Overcame weaknesses with hard work sports and
    elocution
  • Like his father, believed in the Divine Right
    Of Kings
  • Married Henrietta Maria who shared beliefs and
    hated Puritans
  • Puritans wished to purify the Anglican
    Church from any remaining traces of Roman
    Catholic ritual.
  • Also believed in Predestination God
    determined who would be saved, the elect, and
    who would not from the beginning of time.

2
  • Charles I cont
  • Puritan movement strong in South England ran
    opposite the landed aristocracy in the north,
    who were largely Catholic.
  • Parliament 1625 Charles wanted money to fund
    his expenses and ongoing war with Spain. He
    got less than he wanted, and Parliament passed
    measures to restrict his right to collect
    import and export duties and to meet annually to
    review government expenses.
  • Charless response forcing loans to the
    government and collecting unapproved taxes.
  • 1628 Parliament Charles demands his requests
    for money met.
  • Parliaments response The Petition of Right
    King must have Parliamentary consent to levy
    taxes.

3
  • Charles I cont
  • Charles orders Parliament to adjourn after it
    begins to enforce strictly Calvinist views and
    to punish Catholics. Only adjourns after the
    kings troops threaten.
  • Several leading Parliamentarians imprisoned.
  • Absolute King the next 11 years. No
    Parliament. New taxes without consent of the
    people.
  • Puritans angered Puritan leaders imprisoned,
    tortured, and executed. Puritans begin
    emigrating to America.
  • Scottish Revolt didnt stand for the new
    rules imposed by Calvinism in favor of
    Scottish Presbyterianism

4
  • Revolution and Civil War
  • The Long Parliament The Grand Remonstrance
    - required that the kings appointees be
    approved by Parliament. Charles attempted to
    arrest the members of Parliament, but they
    werent there. They retreated to Guildhall and
    were protected by a citizen army. Charles fled
    to York. His wife fled to France.
  • Roundheads Parliaments army Cavaliers
    Royalist Troops
  • Oliver Cromwell the leader of the Puritans.
    Defeated the Royalist forces .
  • 1649 Rump Parliament tried Charles I for
    treason (making war on Parliament), and was
    executed on January 30th.

5
  • Commonwealth and Protectorate
  • Protestant Interregnum 1649 1660 Era of
    Puritan rule in England.
  • Commonwealth 1649-1653 Cromwell and radical
    Puritan Parliament closed newspapers, outlawed
    frivolous activities such as going to the
    theater and dancing.
  • Faced riots in Scotland and Ireland, and war
    with Holland and Spain.
  • Country deeply divided over the right to
    execute a rightful heir to the throne.
  • Parliament dissolved in 1653, and Cromwell
    declared Lord Protector for Life, essentially
    a dictator and absolute monarch.

6
  • Commonwealth and Protectorate
  • Special Session of Parliament called after
    Cromwells death, and Charles II, in exile in
    France, called back to be king. Monarchy
    restored, revolution ended.
  • In Summary, War broke out in 1642, and it
    officially ended in 1649 with the execution of
    Charles I. The period which follows is known as
    the Interregnum (from Latin), implying a "time
    between" kings, because there was no king during
    this time. For most of it, England was ruled by
    Oliver Cromwell as Lord Protector. The monarchy
    was restored in 1660, less than two years after
    Cromwell's death his son and followers simply
    couldn't muster the iron will or the military
    power to keep the nation unified after his death.

7
  • Literature of the period
  • The Metaphysical Poets John Donne
  • The Cavalier Poets Robert Herrick, Andrew
    Marvell
  • Puritan Writers John Milton and John Bunyan
  • The war and its aftermath, had tremendous effects
    on the literature of the day. Most of the writers
    were considered by themselves, as well as by
    later scholars "Cavaliers," (supporters of the
    Monarchy), or Metaphysical Poets, or Puritans.

8
  • Metaphysical Poetry
  • The term was first coined by Samuel Johnson and
    was used in a negative light. He and another
    poet named John Dryden were critical of the
    group of poets as too proud of their wit.
  • The Metaphysicals were out of critical favor
    for the 18th and 19th centuries (the Romantics
    wouldnt like this heavily intellectualized
    poetry).
  • Metaphysical Poetry joins together a number of
    17th century poets, most notable among them
    John Donne and Andrew Marvell

9
  • Metaphysical Poetry cont
  • Metaphysical means dealing with the
    relationship between spirit to matter or the
    ultimate nature of reality.
  • The Metaphysical poets are obviously not the
    only poets to deal with this subject matter, so
    there are a number of other qualities involved
    as well 
  • Use of ordinary speech mixed with puns,
    paradoxes and conceits (a paradoxical metaphor
    causing a shock to the reader by the
    strangeness of the objects compared some
    examples lovers and a compass, the soul and
    timber, the body and mind)

10
  • Metaphysical Poetry cont
  • The exaltation of wit, which in the 17th
    century meant a nimbleness of thought a sense
    of fancy (imagination of a fantastic or
    whimsical nature) and originality in figures of
    speech.
  • Abstruse terminology often drawn from science
    or law Often poems are presented in the form
    of an argument In love poetry, the
    metaphysical poets often draw on ideas from
    Renaissance Neo-Platonism to show the
    relationship between the soul and body and the
    union of lovers' souls
  • They also try to show a psychological realism
    when describing the tensions of love.
  •  

11
  • The Cavalier Poets
  • An early seventeenth-century movement, centered
    on Robert Herrick, for example, and most were
    admirers of Ben Jonson.
  • They get their name from the supporters of King
    Charles I in the seventeenth century the
    Cavaliers were Royalists during the Civil Wars.
    (The supporters of Parliament were nicknamed
    Roundheads.)
  • It's traditional to contrast the Cavalier poets
    to the Metaphysical Poets.
  • Whereas the Metaphysical poets were fond of
    abstruse imagery and complicated metaphors, the
    Cavaliers preferred more straightforward
    expression.

12
  • The Cavalier Poets
  • They valued elegance and were part of a
    refined, courtly culture, but their poetry is
    often frankly erotic.
  • Their strength was the short lyric poem, and a
    favorite theme was carpe diem, "seize the
    day.
  • "Cavalier" implies more than just "Royalist"  -
    it implies a particular class of man Courtly,
    well-educated, genteel.
  • The Cavaliers are as likely to be talented with
    the rapier (sword) as with rapier wit, and
    seemingly honored skill with each.
  • Cavalier Poetry is distinguished by a certain
    airiness, a lightness of tone and often of
    subject.

13
  • The Cavalier Poets
  • Certain themes and techniques - Many are love
    poems.
  • Different attitude toward love - more carefree,
    even flippant, and often more sexual than
    Renaissance Poetry.
  • Also a Dark Side - The history of this period
    is shadowed by the darkness of war and
    persecution, so the poetry often has a dark
    side.
  • Darkness and Death are less obvious, or less
    seriously dealt with, than in Donne and other
    Metaphysical Poetry. Underlying sense of
    impending decay or death. Part of Carpe Diem.
  • Robert Herrick - To The Virgins, To Make Much of
    Time.

14
  • Restoration and 18th Century
  • Charles II becomes king in 1660. Parliament
    restored.
  • James II forced to abdicate the throne out of
    fear of another staunch Catholic ruler.
    William and Mary become joint monarchs in 1688.
  • William and Mary give Parliament the right to
    levy taxes and moved government toward
    Constitutional Monarchy.
  • Queen Anne creates nation of Great Britain in
    1707 by uniting Scotland and England.
  • George I created the cabinet system of
    ministers chosen from Parliament to aid the
    monarch.

15
  • Science, Philosophy, and Reason
  • Sir Isaac Newton laws of gravity and motion
  • Idea of natural order - a clockwork universe
    regulated by rational principles influenced
    idea that human intellect could solve social,
    political, and economic problems by discovering
    natural laws.
  • Leads to the name Age of Reason or
    Enlightenment
  • The Divine Right of Kings under dispute, and
    the idea that we all have natural rights comes
    to surface.
  • Neoclassical literature in search for
    rationality and order, the classics are
    rediscovered. Used classical forms and
    allusions and promoted ideals of harmony,
    tradition, and reason. Emphasis on social
    interactions.

16
  • Neoclassical Literature
  • Age of Pope - Alexander Pope - The Rape
    of the Lock mock epic satirizes the battle
    of the sexes. - Jonathan Swift A Modest
    Proposal Essay, and Gullivers Travels
  • Age of Dryden - Mock Heroic or Mock Epic
    Poetry grand scope, lofty language, but mocks
    the heroes. - Oroonoko first English novel
    written
  • Age of Johnson move away from neoclassicism
    toward the free, more emotional, and more
    natural style of the Romantics.

17
  • The End of The Enlightenment
  • Progress achieved through scientific and
    technological advances of Industrial Revolution
    began to appear less positive. - Overworked in
    factories and mills - Deteriorating social
    conditions
  • Is it worth it?
  • Turn from rational and orderly ideals of
    Neoclassicism to intense, emotional ideals that
    would become ROMANTICISM.
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