The Personal Rule of Charles I by Kevin Sharpe

The Personal Rule of Charles I by Kevin Sharpe

Regular price
Checking stock...
Regular price
Checking stock...
Summary

Aims to present an entirely fresh picture of Charles I and his annexation of power. Sharpe analyzes the personality, principles, and policies of a monarch who, after summoning more parliaments in his first year of rule than his predecessors had for a century, determined to govern without them.

The feel-good place to buy books
  • Free US shipping over $15
  • Buying preloved emits 41% less CO2 than new
  • Millions of affordable books
  • Give your books a new home - sell them back to us!

The Personal Rule of Charles I by Kevin Sharpe

In 1625 Charles I succeeded to the throne of a nation heavily involved in a European war and deeply divided by religious controversy. Within four years he had transformed the political landscape of Britain, dissolved parliament, and begun a period of eleven years of personal rule. The nature of the King's government and the circumstances of its eventual collapse are central to an understanding of the origins of the English Civil War that followed. Kevin Sharpe's massive and authoritative analysis, based on a decade of research across a vast range of manuscript and printed sources, amounts to the most significant contribution to the history of early Stuart government since Gardiner's four-volume classic work in 1877. Sharpe presents an entirely fresh picture of Charles I and his annexation of power. He analyzes the personality, principles, and policies of a monarch who, after summoning more parliaments in his first year of rule than his predecessors had for a century, determined to govern without them. He assesses Charles' program of reform in central and local government and in church and state, and he discusses the years of peace and prosperity it engendered. He also examines priorities in foreign affairs and their impact on domestic policy. Sharpe subtly evaluates the degree of cooperation and opposition elicited and provoked by personal rule, and he analyzes the Scottish rebellion of 1637 that occasioned its undoing. The book yields rich new insights into the history of the reign, politics and religion, foreign policy and finance, the court and the counties, and attitudes and ideas. It provides a substantial reevaluation of the character of the king, the importance of parliaments, and the process of government without them. And it represents a critical new perspective on the origins of the political struggle that ended on the battlefields of the English Civil War.
Sharpe, Kevin: -

Kevin Sharpe is editor of the Fortress Press series, Theology and the Sciences, and Science and Spirit, a new magazine devoted to those same topics. He has published numerous journal articles and anthologies and holds doctorates in mathematics and religious studies. He is Professor in the Graduate College of the Union Institute, Cincinnati, and Associate Director of Research at the Ian Ramsay Centre, Oxford University, England.

SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780300065961
ISBN 10 0300065965
Title The Personal Rule of Charles I
Author Kevin Sharpe
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Yale University Press
Year published 1996-09-10
Number of pages 1018
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
Note Unavailable