Early Modern England 1485-1714: A Narrative History

Home > Other > Early Modern England 1485-1714: A Narrative History > Page 68
Early Modern England 1485-1714: A Narrative History Page 68

by Bucholz, Robert


  Cressy, D. and Ferrell, L. A., eds. Religion and Society in Early Modern England: Voices, Sources and Texts, 2nd ed. London, 2005.

  Elizabeth I: Collected Works, ed. L. S. Marcus, J. Mueller, and M. B. Rose. Chicago, 2000.

  Elton, G. R., ed. The Tudor Constitution: Documents and Commentary, 2nd ed. Cambridge, 1986.

  Iagomarsino, D. and Wood, C. J., eds. The Trial of Charles I: A Documentary History. Hanover, N. H., 1989.

  Kekewich, M. L., ed. Princes and Peoples: France and the British Isles, 1620–1714. Manchester, 1994.

  Kenyon, J. P., ed. The Stuart Constitution, 1603–1688: Documents and Commentary, 2nd ed. Cambridge, 1986.

  Key, N. and Bucholz, R., eds. Sources and Debates in English History, 1485–1714. 2nd ed. Oxford, 2008.

  King, J. N., ed. Voices of the English Reformation: A Sourcebook. Philadelphia, 2004.

  Kinney, A. F. Elizabethan Backgrounds: Historical Documents of the Age of Elizabeth I. Hamden, Conn., 1990.

  Latham, R., ed. The Shorter Pepys. Berkeley, 1985. (Selections)

  Lindley, K., ed. The English Civil War and Revolution: A Sourcebook. London, 1998.

  Malcolm, J. L., ed. The Struggle for Sovereignty: Seventeenth-Century English Political Tracts, 2 vols. Indianapolis, Ind., 1999.

  Raymond, J., ed. Making the News: An Anthology of the Newsbooks of Revolutionary England, 1641–1660. New York, 1993.

  Smith, D. L., ed. Oliver Cromwell: Politics and Religion in the English Revolution, 1640–1658. Cambridge, 1991.

  Stroud, A. Stuart England. London, 1999.

  Tomlinson, H. and Gregg, D., eds. Politics, Religion and Society in Revolutionary England, 1640–60. Basingstoke, 1989.

  Wootton, D., ed. Divine Right and Democracy: An Anthology of Political Writing in Stuart England. Harmondsworth, 1986.

  Yeoman, L., ed. Reportage Scotland: History in the Making. Edinburgh, 2000.

  See also sources printed in Barnard (1997), Bennett (1995), Braddick (1996), Carrier (1998), Coward (1997), Doran (1996), Fletcher and MacCulloch (1997), Lockyer and Thrush (1997), and Tittler (1991).

  Websites and Online Primary Sources

  Adams and Stephens “Select Documents of English Constitutional History.” http://home.freeuk.net/don-aitken/ast/astcontents.html. (Henry VI through George I, etc.)

  American Colonist’s Library. http://home.wi.rr.com/rickgardiner/primarysources.htm. (Includes Voyages, Puritans)

  Avalon Project at the Yale Law School: Pre-Eighteenth-Century Documents. http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/pre18.htm. (Colonial Charters, Treaties, Discourses on Trade, Bill of Rights, etc.)

  British History Online. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/. (Extensive collection of State Papers, Rushworth’s Collections, contemporary maps, lists of government officials)

  The Cromwell Association. http://www.olivercromwell.org/. (Civil Wars, Protectorate)

  Documents Illustrating Jacobite History. http://www.jacobite.ca/documents/. (Exclusion Crisis, Glorious Revolution, Exile)

  EuroDocs: History of the United Kingdom. http://eudocs.lib.byu.edu/index.php/History_of_the_United_Kingdom:_Primary_Documents. (Britain 1486–1688, 1689–1815, etc.) Fire and Ice: Puritan and Reformed Writings. http://www.puritansermons.com/. (Richard Baxter, John Calvin, etc.)

  Internet Archive of Texts and Documents: The Protestant Reformation. http://history.hanover.edu/early/prot.html. (Texts from English and Scottish Reformations)

  Internet Modern History Sourcebook: The Early Modern West. http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/modsbook1.html. (Sources on reformations, colonial conquests, political theorists and revolutions)

  John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs. http://www.hrionline.ac.uk/johnfoxe/. (Varorium edition)

  National Archives: Treasures from the National Archives, Tudors and Stuarts (1485–1714). http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/museum/dates.asp?date_id=2. (Portraits, seals, wills, etc.)

  Philogical Library, Humanist Texts. http://www.philological.bham.ac.uk/library.html (Sixteenth and seventeenth-century texts transcribed)

  Renascence Editions. http://www.uoregon.edu/~rbear/ren.htm. (Shakespeare and other works, 1477–1799)

  Richard III Society, American Branch. http://www.r3.org/bookcase/. (Extensive collection of sources on Wars of the Roses, fifteenth-century society and culture)

  Westminster Assembly Project. http://www.westminsterassembly.org/ (Sources, transcriptions from 1640s)

  Appendix: Genealogies

  Genealogy 1 The Yorkists and Lancastrians

  Genealogy 2 The Tudors and Stuarts

  Genealogy 3 The Stuarts and Hanoverians

  Index

  Addison, Joseph

  Agincourt, Battle of

  agriculture

  commons for grazing

  Edward VI’s policies

  enclosure

  farmhouses

  husbandmen and cottagers

  improvements

  livestock

  manors and tenants

  social hierarchy

  workers

  yeomen

  Albermarle, earl of (Arnold Joost van Keppel)

  Alençon and Anjou, François,duke of

  Alfred the Great

  Allen, Fr. William

  Alvarez de Toledo, Fernando, duke of Alva

  American colonies

  exploration and colonization

  Puritans settle in

  slavery in

  trade with

  Treaty of Utrecht

  Anabaptists

  Angles

  Anne (née Hyde), duchess of York

  Anne (Stuart)

  arts and culture

  character of

  death of

  final days of

  Harley’s ministry

  legacy of

  money for clergy

  portrait of

  Protestant marriage of

  reluctant to discuss succession

  succession issue

  Tory sympathies

  Union with Scotland

  woman’s achievement

  Anne of Cleves (Henry VIII’s queen)

  Anne of Denmark (James VI’s queen)

  Annent Peace and War Act

  architecture

  baroque palaces

  churches

  classical models

  country houses

  London

  Restoration era

  Argyll, earl of (Archibald Campbell)

  aristocracy and elite

  Anglo-Saxon thegns

  character of England

  constitutional rule

  at court

  effect of Civil Wars

  Hanoverian

  Henry VIII’s court

  hierarchies

  leaders after Revolution

  in London

  paternalism and deference

  private life of

  Tudor and Stuart

  Welsh Marcher Lords

  Arlington, earl of (Henry Bennet)

  Arminianism

  Arminius, Jacobus

  Arthur, Prince (Henry VIII’s brother)

  Artificers, Statute of (1563)

  arts and culture

  Mary II and

  ‘middling orders’

  a ‘new Augustan age’

  Tudor/Stuart patronage of

  see also architecture; literature; music; painting and sculpture; theatre

  Arundel, earl of (Henry Fitzalan)

  Aske, Robert

  Astell, Mary

  Astley, Sir Jacob

  Babington, Anthony

  Bacon, Sir Francis

  Advancement of Learning

  New Atlantis

  Bacon, Sir Nicholas

  Baltimore, Lord (George Calvert)

  Bancroft, Archbishop Richard

  Banister, John

  banks and financial institutions

  Bank of England established

  Baptists

  Barbon, Nicholas

  Barebone,
Praise-God

  Barton, Elizabeth

  Bastwick, John

  Bath Spa

  Baxter, Richard

  Beachy Head, Battle of

  Beaufort, Edmund, duke of Somerset

  Beaufort, Lady Margaret

  Bedlam see Bethlehem Hospital

  Behn, Aphra

  Belgium

  Bennet, Henry, earl of Arlington

  Bentinck, William, earl of Portland

  Berwick, Treaty of (1639)

  Bethlehem Hospital (Bedlam)

  The Bible (King James version)

  Bill of Rights (1689)

  Birmingham

  Bishops’ Wars

  Blathwayt, William

  Blenheim, Battle of

  Blenheim Palace, Oxfordshire

  Blount, Charles, Lord Mountjoy

  Blow, John

  Bohemia

  Boleyn, Anne (Henry VIII’s queen)

  birth of Elizabeth

  as catalyst

  downfall of

  religious beliefs

  Boleyn, George, Lord Rochford

  Boleyn, Mary

  Boleyn, Sir Thomas

  Bolingbroke, Henry

  Bolingbroke, Viscount (Henry St John)

  Bothwell, earl of (James Hepburn)

  Bourbon family

  Boyle, Robert

  Boyne, Battle of

  Bradshaw, John

  Brandon, Charles, duke of Suffolk

  Bray, Sir Reginald

  Breda Declaration

  Brewer, John

  Bridewell workhouse

  Bridgman, Charles

  Brinkelow, Henry

  Bristol

  siege of

  Britain

  Hanoverian stability

  island mentality

  map of

  Treaty of Utrecht and

  see also England; Scotland; Wales

  Britton, Thomas

  Browne, Robert

  Brunswick family

  Brydges, James, duke of Chandos

  Buchanan, George

  Buckingham, 1st creation see Stafford

  Buckingham, 2nd creation see Villiers

  Bunyan, John

  The Pilgrim’s Progress

  Burbage, James

  Burbage, Richard

  Burghley, Lord (William Cecil)

  delays conflict with Spain

  influence in Elizabeth’s court

  Burton, Henry

  Butler family, earls of Ormond (Ireland)

  Byrd, William

  Cabal

  Cabot, John

  Cabot, Sebastian

  Cade, Jack

  Calvert, George, Lord Baltimore

  Calvin, John

  Camden, William

  Cambridge University

  Camden, William

  Cameron, Richard

  Campbell, Archibald, earl of Argyll

  Campeggio, Cardinal

  Campion, Fr. Edmond

  Campion, Thomas

  Canada

  capital punishment

  Caribbean islands

  Carlos II of Spain

  Carr, Robert, earl of Somerset

  Cartwright, Thomas

  Castle Howard, Yorkshire

  Cateau-Cambrésis, Treaty of

  Catherine of Aragon (Henry VIII’s queen)

  divorce and

  loyalty to

  married to prince Henry

  Mary I and

  Catherine of Braganza (Charles II’s queen)

  Catherine de’ Medici of France

  Cavalier Code

  Cavaliers (Royalists)

  see also Civil Wars

  Cavendish, William, earl of Devonshire

  Cecil, Robert see Salisbury, earl of

  Cecil, William see Burghley, Lord

  Celts

  Centlivre, Susannah

  Chancery

  Chandos, duke of (James Brydges)

  Chantries Act (1547)

  Charles, Archduke of Austria

  Charles I (Stuart)

  arts and

  character of

  defends Buckingham

  Eikon Basilike

  foreign policy

  Henrietta Maria and

  James II’s judgment of

  military defeat

  overthrow and execution

  Personal Rule

  portrait by Van Dyck

  possible Spanish marriage

  power of monarchy

  Roman Catholics and

  Roundhead/Cavalier positions

  the Royal Martyr

  Scotland rebels

  Short and Long Parliaments

  sources of Civil Wars and

  without strong bureaucracy

  Charles II (Stuart)

  arts and culture under

  character of

  death of

  Exclusion Crisis

  finances of

  foreign policy

  Louis XIV and Catholicism

  Popish Plot against

  portrait of

  relationship with Parliament

  religion of

  restoration of

  rules without Parliament

  Scottish support for

  Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor

  Henry VIII and

  Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor

  Charles VI of France

  Charles VIII of France

  Chatsworth House, Derbyshire

  Chichester, Sir Arthur

  children

  Church of England

  after Charles I

  appearance of Puritans

  Arminianism

  Book of Common Prayer

  Catholic or Protestant?

  Charles I and Laud’s reforms

  clergy of

  Commonwealthmen

  dissolution of monasteries

  education and

  effect of Glorious Revolution

  Elizabethan practice

  Elizabeth’s settlement

  establishment of

  fines for non-attendance

  Forty-Two Articles

  Hanoverian stability and

  Henry VIII’s break with Rome

  James II and

  loyal Anglican Tories

  majority religion

  peer pressures

  poverty and

  pre- and post-reform

  Restoration and

  Sacheverell case

  Six Articles

  Thirty-Nine Articles

  Churchill, Anne

  Churchill, John see Marlborough, duke of

  Churchill, Sir Winston

  civil liberties

  Civil List Act

  civil rights

  martial law

  Civil Wars

  amnesty

  changes in thought and religion

  historical perspectives

  Independents

  king’s defeat

  Long Parliament

  long-term results of

  map of

  military campaign

  New Model Army

  Parliamentary Presbyterians

  punishments and rewards

  Roundhead/Cavalier positions

  in Scotland

  Clarendon, 1st earl of (Edward Hyde)

  Clark, J. C. D.

  Clarkson, Laurence

  Clement VII, Pope

  Clifford, Thomas

  Coke, Sir Edward

  Coke, Thomas

  Coleman, Edward

  Colet, John

  Collier, Jeremy

  Columbus, Christopher

  Commonwealth government

  reforms and laws of

  unpopularity

  Compton, Bishop Henry

  Conventicle Act (1664)

  Cooper, Anthony Ashley see Shaftesbury, earl of

  Coppe, Abiezer

  Cornbury, Viscount (Edward Hyde)

  Cornwall

  Cornyshe, William
<
br />   Corporation Acts

  Coventry

  Coverdale, Miles

  Cowley, Abraham

  craftsmen and guilds

  Cranfield, Lionel, earl of Middlesex

  Cranmer, Archbishop Thomas

  Book of Common Prayer

  burning of

  Henry VIII’s final years

  Henry’s marriages and

  Protestantism and

  crime and corruption

  alehouses and

  within the church

  criminal proceedings

  draconian punishment

  migrant workers

  poverty and

  sensational criminals

  witchcraft

  women and

  see also capital punishment; laws and policing

  Cromwell, Oliver

  Civil Wars military

  death of

  dissolves Rump

  England and Scotland

  generalship

  Ireland and

  pleads for Scottish support

  portrait of

  posthumous punishment

  problem of taxes

  the Protectorate

  reforms of

  Cromwell, Richard

  Cromwell, Thomas

  decline and execution of

  governmental initiatives

  literature and

  Protestantism and

  secures Church for king

  succeeds Wolsey

  Crowley, Robert

  Danby, earl of (Thomas Osborne)

  Darby, Abraham

  Darnley, Lord (Henry Stewart)

  Davenant, Charles

  Davison, William

  death and burial

  Decker, Thomas

  The Roaring Girl

  Declaration of Indulgence (1672)

  Declaratory Act

  Dee, John

  Defoe, Daniel

  Moll Flanders

  Review

  Deism

  Dekker, Thomas

  democratic movements

  Levellers

  see also civil liberties

  Denmark

  Thirty Years’ War

  War of the Spanish Succession

  Denny, Sir Anthony

  Dering, Sir Edward

  Devereaux, Robert, 2nd earl of Essex see Essex, 2nd earl of

  Devereaux, Robert, 3rd earl of Essex see Essex, 3rd earl of

  Devonshire, earl of (William Cavendish)

  Dickens, A. G.

  Dickson, P. G. M.

  Diggers

  disease and illness

  charity hospitals

  commoners and

  doctors

  infant mortality

  influenza

  life expectancy

  plague

  Dissenters

  conforming

  Declaration of Indulgence (1672)

  effect of Glorious Revolution

  James II and

  numbers of

  scientific approaches

  Donne, John

  Dorchester, Countess of (Catherine Sedley)

  Douglas, Archibald, earl of Angus

  Dover, Treaty of

  Dowland, John

  Drake, Sir Francis

  Drayton, Michael

 

‹ Prev