The Politics of Counsel in England and Scotland, 1286-1707
Series: Proceedings of the British Academy; 204;
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33 442 Ft (31 850 Ft + 5% VAT)
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33 442 Ft
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Product details:
- Publisher The British Academy
- Date of Publication 1 December 2016
- ISBN 9780197266038
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages350 pages
- Size 242x168x10 mm
- Weight 686 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 1 frontispiece (b&w) 0
Categories
Short description:
Political advice or counsel was fundamental to theory and practice in medieval and early modern government. This book charts continuity and change as counsel both influenced and was affected by warfare, British unions, and the Reformations, as well as how it functioned in important reigns such as those of James III, Elizabeth I, and Charles I.
MoreLong description:
Counsel was a fundamental element of the theoretical framework and practical workings of medieval and early modern government. Good rule was to be ensured by governors hearing wise advisers. This process of counsel assumed particular importance in England and Scotland between the 14th and 17th centuries because of the close adherence to ideas of the common good, commonwealth, and community in this period.
Yet this era saw major changes in who gave counsel and how it operated. This volume identifies both patterns and moments of change while also recognising continuities. It examines counsel in the context of Anglo-Scottish warfare and unions, the Reformations, and early colonising ventures, as well as in the contingent circumstances of individual reigns and long-term evolutions in the nature of government.
Depicting counsel as ubiquitous yet archivally elusive, this volume uses government records, pamphlets, plays, poetry, histories, and oaths to establish a new framework for understanding advice. As it shows, a widespread belief in good counsel masked fundamental tensions between accountability and secrecy, inclusive representation and political cohesiveness, and between upholding and restraining sovereign authority.
The book has been well planned, with thirteen substantive chapters and a very long and valuable introduction. There is extensive cross-referencing, and evidence of discussion among contributors at the workshops that preceded the book. This book thus gives political historians much to ponder. It is particularly thought-provoking to see counsel placed, as it often is here, in a broader context. More
Table of Contents:
- 1: JACQUELINE ROSE: The Problem of Political Counsel in Medieval and Early Modern England and Scotland
- 2: MICHAEL BROWN: 'Lele consail for the comoun profite': Kings, Guardians and Councils in the Scottish Kingdom, c.1250-1450
- 3: JOHN WATTS: Counsel and the King's Council in England, c.1340-c.1540
- 4: JEREMY CATTO: Counsel and Conscience in Lancastrian England
- 5: ELIZA HARTRICH: Locality, Polity and the Politics of Counsel: Royal and Urban Councils in England, 1420-1429
- 6: CLAIRE HAWES: 'Perverst counsale'? Rebellion, Satire and the Politics of Advice in Fifteenth-Century Scotland
- 7: RICHARD REX: Councils, Counsel and Consensus in Henry VIII's Reformation
- 8: SUSAN DORAN: Elizabeth I and Counsel
- 9: PAULINA KEWES: 'Jerusalem thou dydst promise to buylde up': Kingship, Counsel and Early Elizabethan Drama
- 10: ALAN R. MACDONALD: Consultation, Counsel and the 'Early Stuart Period' in Scotland
- 11: ALEXANDER HASKELL: Councils, Providence and Political Legitimacy in Early Virginia
- 12: ROGER A. MASON: Counsel and Covenant: Aristocratic Conciliarism and the Scottish Revolution
- 13: JACQUELINE ROSE: Sir Edward Hyde and the Problem of Counsel in Mid-Seventeenth-Century Royalist Thought
- 14: JACQUELINE ROSE: Councils, Counsel and the Seventeenth-Century Composite State