Thomas Cogswell, Richard Cust and Peter Lake (eds): Politics, Religion and Popularity (Cambridge, 2002).
Richard Cust and Ann Hughes (eds): Conflict in Early Stuart England (London, 1989).
Godfrey Davies: The Early Stuarts (Oxford, 1959).
Kenneth Fincham (ed.): The Early Stuart Church (London, 1993).
S. R. Gardiner: History of England, 1603–1642. In ten volumes (London, 1899).
William Haller: The Rise of Puritanism (New York, 1938).
Christopher Hill: Puritanism and Revolution (London, 1958).
Derek Hirst: Authority and Conflict (London, 1986).
Ronald Hutton: Debates in Stuart History (London, 2004).
J. P. Kenyon: The Stuart Constitution (Cambridge, 1966).
Peter Lake: Anglicans and Puritans? (London, 1988).
Peter Lake and Steven Pincus (eds): The Politics of the Public Sphere in Early Modern England (Manchester, 2007).
John Lingard and Hilaire Belloc: The History of England. Volumes seven to ten (New York, 1912).
Judith Maltby: Prayer Book and People in Elizabethan and Early Stuart England (Cambridge, 1998).
Brian Manning: The English People and the English Revolution (London, 1976).
John Morgan: Godly Learning (Cambridge, 1986).
John Morrill, Paul Slack and Daniel Woolf (eds): Public Duty and Private Conscience in Seventeenth Century England (Oxford, 1993).
J. F. H. New: Anglican and Puritan (London, 1964).
Linda Levy Peck: Court Patronage and Corruption in Early Stuart England (London, 1990).
H. S. Reinmuth Jnr. (ed.): Early Stuart Studies (Minneapolis, 1970).
Conrad Russell: Parliament and English Politics, 1621–1629 (Oxford, 1979).
——— Unrevolutionary England (London, 1990).
Kevin Sharpe, Politics and Ideas in Early Stuart England (London, 1989).
——— Image Wars (New Haven, 2010).
——— (ed.): Faction and Parliament (London, 1978).
Kevin Sharpe and Peter Lake: Culture and Politics in Early Stuart England (London, 1994).
Alan Smith: The Emergence of a Nation State (London, 1984).
J. P. Sommerville: Politics and Ideology in England, 1603–1640 (London, 1986).
David Starkey (ed.): The English Court (London, 1987).
Margot Todd (ed.): Reformation to Revolution (London, 1995).
Howard Tomlinson (ed.): Before the English Civil War (London, 1983).
Hugh Trevor-Roper: Historical Essays (London, 1957).
——— Catholics, Anglicans and Puritans (London, 1987).
Nicholas Tyacke: Anti-Calvinists (Oxford, 1987).
——— (ed.) The English Revolution (Manchester, 2007).
David Underdown: Revel, Riot and Rebellion (Oxford, 1985).
J. Dover Wilson (ed.): Seventeenth Century Studies (Oxford, 1938).
Andy Wood: Riot, Rebellion and Popular Politics in Early Modern England (London, 2002).
JAMES VI AND I
Robert Ashton: James by his Contemporaries (London, 1969).
Bryan Bevan: King James (London, 1990).
Caroline Bingham: James of England (London, 1981).
Thomas Birch: The Court and Times of James. In two volumes (London, 1848).
Glenn Burgess: Absolute Monarchy (London, 1996).
Irene Carrier: James (Cambridge, 1998).
Thomas Cogswell: The Blessed Revolution (Cambridge, 1989).
James Doelman: King James and the Religious Culture of England (Cambridge, 2000).
Kenneth Fincham: Prelate as Pastor (Oxford, 1990).
Antonia Fraser: King James (London, 1974).
S. J. Houston: James (London, 1972).
Robert Lockyer: James (London, 1998).
David Matthew: The Jacobean Age (London, 1938).
——— James (London, 1967).
W. M. Mitchell: The Rise of the Revolutionary Party (New York, 1957).
W. B. Patterson: King James and the Reunion of Christendom (Cambridge, 1997).
Linda Levy Peck (ed.): The Mental World of the Jacobean Court (Cambridge, 1991).
Menna Prestwich: Cranfield (Oxford, 1966).
Walter Scott: Secret History of the Court of James. In two volumes (London, 1811).
Alan G. R. Smith (ed.): The Reign of James (London, 1973).
Alan Stewart: The Cradle King (London, 2003).
Roy Strong: Henry, Prince of Wales (London, 2000).
Roland Usher: The Reconstruction of the English Church. In two volumes (New York, 1910).
D. H. Willson: King James (London, 1956).
CHARLES I
G. E. Aylmer: The King’s Servants (London, 1961).
Thomas Birch and Cyprien de Gamache: The Court and Times of Charles I. In two volumes (London, 1848).
Charles Carlton: Charles I: The Personal Monarch (London, 1983).
Hester Chapman: Great Villiers (London, 1949).
H. P. Cooke: Charles I and his Earlier Parliaments (London, 1939).
E. S. Cope: Politics without Parliaments (London, 1987).
Richard Cust: Charles I: A Political Life (London, 2005).
C. W. Daniels and John Morrill: Charles I (Cambridge, 1988).
Isaac Disraeli: Commentaries on the Life and Reign of Charles I. In five volumes (London, 1828–1831).
Christopher Durston: Charles I (London, 1998).
J. H. Hexter: The Reign of King Pym (Cambridge, Mass., 1961).
Christopher Hibbert: Charles I (London, 2007).
F. M. G. Higham: Charles I (London,1932).
Clive Holmes: Why Was Charles I Executed? (London, 2006).
David Matthew: The Social Structure in Caroline England (Oxford, 1948).
——— The Age of Charles I (London, 1951).
Brian Quintrell: Charles I (London, 1993).
L. J. Reeve: Charles I and the Road to Personal Rule (Cambridge, 1989).
Conrad Russell: The Fall of the British Monarchies (Oxford, 1991).
Kevin Sharpe: The Personal Rule of Charles I (New Haven, 1992).
Hugh Trevor-Roper: Archbishop Laud (London, 1940).
C. V. Wedgwood: The King’s Peace (London, 1955).
——— Thomas Wentworth (New York, 1962).
G. M. Young: Charles I and Cromwell (London, 1935).
OLIVER CROMWELL
Maurice Ashley: The Greatness of Oliver Cromwell (London, 1957).
Hilaire Belloc: Cromwell (London, 1934).
John Buchan: Cromwell (London, 1934).
Barry Coward: Oliver Cromwell (London, 1991).
J. C. Davis: Oliver Cromwell (London, 2001).
C. H. Firth: Cromwell (London, 1901).
Antonia Fraser: Cromwell (London, 1973).
S. R. Gardiner: Oliver Cromwell (London, 1901).
Peter Gaunt: Oliver Cromwell (Oxford, 1996).
François Guizot: Oliver Cromwell (London, 1879).
Christopher Hill: God’s Englishman (London, 1971).
Roger Howell: Cromwell (London, 1977).
Frank Kitson: Old Ironsides (London, 2004).
John Morley: Oliver Cromwell (London, 1904).
John Morrill (ed.): Oliver Cromwell (Oxford, 2007).
Micheál Ó Siochrú: God’s Executioner (London, 2008).
C. V. Wedgwood: Oliver Cromwell (London, 1973).
CIVIL WAR
John Adamson: The Noble Revolt (London, 2007).
Michael Braddick: God’s Fury, England’s Fire (London, 2008).
Charles Carlton: Going to the Wars (London, 1992).
Edward, earl of Clarendon: The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England. In six volumes (Oxford, 1888).
David Cressy: England on Edge (Oxford, 2007).
Richard Cust and Ann Hughes (eds): The English Civil War (London, 1997).
Barbara Donagan: War in England, 1642–1649 (Oxford, 2008).
Anthony Fletcher: The Outbreak of the English Civil War (London, 1981).
S. R.
Gardiner: History of the Great Civil War. In four volumes (London, 1888).
Peter Gaunt (ed.): The English Civil War (Oxford, 2000).
Ian Gentles: The English Revolution (London, 2007).
Christopher Hill: The English Revolution (London, 1940).
Ann Hughes: The Causes of the English Civil War (London, 1991).
Ronald Hutton: The Royalist War Effort (London, 1982).
D. E. Kennedy: The English Revolution (London, 2000).
John Kenyon: The Civil Wars of England (London, 1988).
Mark Kishlansky: The Rise of the New Model Army (Cambridge, 1979).
Jason McElligott and David Smith (eds): Royalists and Royalism during the English Civil Wars (Cambridge, 2007).
Allan Macinnes: The British Revolution (London, 2005).
Brian Manning (ed.): Politics, Religion and the English Civil War (London, 1973).
Michael Mendle (ed.): The Putney Debates (Cambridge, 2001).
John Morrill: The Revolt of the Provinces (London, 1976).
——— The Nature of the English Revolution (London, 1993).
——— (ed.) Reactions to the English Civil War (London, 1982).
Jason Peacey (ed.): The Regicides and the Execution of Charles I (London, 2001).
R. C. Richardson: The Debate on the English Revolution (London, 1977).
Ivan Roots: The Great Rebellion (London, 1966).
Conrad Russell (ed.): The Origins of the English Civil War (London, 1973).
David Scott: Politics and War in the Three Stuart Kingdoms (London, 2004).
Lawrence Stone: The Causes of the English Revolution (London, 1972).
John Stubbs: Reprobates (London, 2011).
David Underdown: Pride’s Purge (Oxford, 1971).
Malcolm Wanklyn: The Warrior Generals (London, 2010).
C. V. Wedgwood: The King’s War (London, 1958).
Austin Woolrych: Britain in Revolution (Oxford, 2002).
Blair Worden: The Rump Parliament (Cambridge, 1974).
——— The English Civil Wars (London, 2009).
COMMONWEALTH AND PROTECTORATE
G. E. Aylmer (ed.): The Interregnum (London, 1972).
Toby Barnard: The English Republic (London, 1982).
Jakob Bowman: The Protestant Interest in Cromwell’s Foreign Relations (Heidelberg, 1900).
Barry Coward: The Cromwellian Protectorate (Manchester, 2002).
C. H. Firth: The Last Years of the Protectorate. In two volumes (London, 1909).
S. R. Gardiner: History of the Commonwealth and Protectorate. In four volumes (London, 1903).
William Haller: Liberty and Information in the Puritan Revolution (New York, 1955).
Ronald Hutton: The British Republic (London, 1990).
William Lamont: Godly Rule (London, 1969).
Jason McElligott: Royalism, Print and Censorship in Revolutionary England (Woodbridge, 2007).
John Morrill (ed.): Revolution and Restoration (London, 1992).
Robert Paul: The Lord Protector (London, 1955).
David Smith (ed.): Cromwell and the Interregnum (Oxford, 2003).
Michael Walzer: The Revolution of the Saints (New York, 1974).
Austin Woolrych: Commonwealth to Protectorate (London, 1980).
——— England without a King (London, 1983).
CHARLES II
Maurice Ashley: Charles II (London, 1973).
Robert Bosher: The Making of the Restoration Settlement (London, 1951).
Hester Chapman: The Tragedy of Charles II (London, 1964).
Raymond Crawfurd: The Last Days of Charles II (Oxford, 1909).
Godfrey Davies: The Restoration of Charles II (London, 1955).
Antonia Fraser: King Charles II (London, 1979).
Tim Harris: Restoration (London, 2005).
Tim Harris, Paul Seaward and Mark Goldie (eds): The Politics of Religion in Restoration England (Oxford, 1990).
Cyril Hartmann: Clifford of the Cabal (London, 1937).
Ronald Hutton: The Restoration (Oxford, 1985).
———: Charles II (Oxford, 1989).
Matthew Jenkinson: Culture and Politics at the Court of Charles II (Woodbridge, 2010).
J. R. Jones: The First Whigs (Oxford, 1961).
——— Charles II (London, 1987).
——— (ed.) The Restored Monarchy (London, 1979).
J. P. Kenyon: Robert Spencer, Earl of Sunderland, 1641–1702 (London, 1958).
Anna Keay: The Magnificent Monarch (London, 2008).
Maurice Lee Jnr: The Cabal (Urbana, 1965).
John Miller: Charles II (London, 1991).
——— After the Civil Wars (London, 2000).
Annabel Patterson: The Long Parliament of Charles II (New Haven, 2008).
Stephen Pincus: Protestantism and Patriotism (Cambridge, 1996).
Paul Seaward: The Cavalier Parliament and the Reconstruction of the Old Regime (Cambridge, 1988).
Thomas Slaughter: Newcastle’s Advice to Charles II (Philadelphia, 1984).
Jenny Uglow: A Gambling Man (London, 2009).
Brian Weiser: Charles II and the Politics of Access (Woodbridge, 2003).
JAMES II
John Callow: The Making of King James II (Stroud, 2000).
Eveline Cruickshanks (ed.): By Force or By Default? (Edinburgh, 1989).
Lionel Glassey (ed.): The Reigns of Charles II and James II (London, 1997).
Tim Harris: Revolution (London, 2006).
J. R. Jones: The Revolution of 1688 in England (London, 1972).
T. B. Macaulay: The History of England from the Accession of James II (London, 1848).
John Miller: Popery and Politics in England (Cambridge, 1973).
——— James II (London, 1978).
W. A. Speck: Reluctant Revolutionaries (Oxford, 1988).
——— James II (London, 2002).
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
I have not included studies of individual authors mentioned in the text.
Maurice Ashley: Life in Stuart England (London, 1964).
David Cressy: Bonfires and Bells (London, 1989).
Eveline Cruickshanks (ed.): The Stuart Courts (Stroud, 2000).
Anthony Fletcher and Peter Roberts (eds): Religion, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain (Cambridge, 1994).
Ian Gentles, John Morrill and Blair Worden (eds): Soldiers, Writers and Statesmen of the English Revolution (Cambridge, 1998).
Johanna Harris and Elizabeth Scott-Baumann: The Intellectual Culture of Puritan Woman (London, 2011).
Alan Houston and Steve Pincus (eds): A Nation Transformed (Cambridge, 2001).
Ronald Hutton: The Rise and Fall of Merry England (Oxford, 1994).
N. H. Keeble: The Restoration. England in the 1660s (Oxford, 2002).
W. K. Jordan: The Development of Religious Toleration in England (London, 1936).
Gerald MacLean: Culture and Society in the Stuart Restoration (Cambridge 1995).
Allardyce Nicoll: Stuart Masques (New York, 1968).
Rosemary O’Day: The English Clergy (Leicester, 1979).
David Ogg: England in the Reign of Charles II. In two volumes (Oxford, 1934).
Stephen Orgel: The Jonsonian Masque (Cambridge, Mass., 1965).
Stephen Orgel and Roy Strong: Inigo Jones. The Theatre of the Stuart Court. In two volumes (London, 1973).
Graham Parry: The Golden Age Restor’d (Manchester, 1981).
R. Malcolm Smuts: Court Culture and the Origins of a Royalist Tradition in Early Stuart England (Philadelphia, 1987).
——— (ed.) The Stuart Court and Europe (Cambridge 1996).
John Spurr: England in the 1670s (Oxford, 2000).
Roy Strong: Art and Power (Woodbridge, 1984).
Blair Worden: Literature and Politics in Cromwellian England (Oxford, 2007).
Index
Abbot, George, archbishop of Canterbury: supports Villiers, ref1; hostility to Catholics, ref2, ref3; succeeds Bancroft as archbishop, ref4; objects to Fra
nces Howard’s divorce from Essex, ref5; attends Frances’s wedding to Somerset, ref6; replaced as archbishop, ref7; death, ref8; and war in Palatinate, 684
‘Abhorrers, the’, ref1
Abingdon, James Bertie, earl of, ref1
Act against Unlicensed and Scandalous Books and Pamphlets (1650), ref1
Act of Indemnity and Oblivion (1660), ref1
Act of Settlement (1652), ref1
Act of Uniformity (1662), ref1, ref2
Adda, Ferdinando d’, archbishop of Amasia (papal nuncio), ref1
‘Addle Parliament’, see under Parliament
‘Agreement of the People’ (pamphlet), ref1
agriculture: revolution, ref1, ref2
Amboyna: massacre (1623), ref1
America: English colonists in, ref1, ref2
Andrewes, Lancelot, bishop of Winchester, ref1
Anne, Princess (Charles II’s daughter), ref1
Anne, Princess ( James II’s daughter), ref1, ref2
Anne of Denmark, wife of James I: coronation, ref1; extravagance, ref2; mourns death of Prince Henry, ref3; supports George Villiers, ref4; declines to visit Scotland, ref5; death, ref6
apprentices: demonstrate, ref1, ref2
Archie (court fool), ref1, ref2, ref3
Arlington, Henry Bennet, 1st earl of, ref1, ref2, ref3
Arminians, ref1, ref2, ref3
Arminius, Jacobus, ref1
army (English): conditions, ref1; James II maintains, ref2; see also New Model Army
Arnold, Matthew, ref1
Arundel, Thomas Howard, 2nd earl of, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Ashe, John, ref1
Astley, Sir Jacob, ref1
Atkyns, Richard, ref1
Aubrey, John, ref1, ref2
Audley End, ref1
Aylesbury, Robert Bruce, 1st earl of, ref1
Bacon, Sir Francis: on Salisbury (Cecil), ref1; on Commons opposition to James I, ref2; on Prince Henry, ref3; ambitions on death of Salisbury, ref4; and Villiers’ rise as favourite, ref5; on natural sciences, ref6; prose style, ref7; The Advancement of Learning, ref8; The New Atlantis, ref9
Baillie, Robert, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Balfour, Sir William, ref1
Bancroft, Richard: bishop of London, ref1; archbishop of Canterbury, ref2, ref3, ref4
Baptists, ref1
Barbados, ref1
Barebone, Isaac Praise-God, ref1
‘Barebone’s Parliament’, see under Parliament
Barkstead, Colonel John, ref1
baron, Hartgill, ref1
Barrington, Thomas and Judith, ref1
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