Unrevolutionary England, 1603-1642

Front Cover
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, Jul 1, 1990 - History - 346 pages
What holds these essays together is the rejection of the idea of 'the birth of the modern world'. England before the Civil War was not a country welcoming a brave new world but one clinging fearfully to an old one. Change, where it happened, was not the result of a deliberate striving for 'progress', and the polity of pre-Civil War England was not on the point of collapse. Parliaments were not dominated by two 'sides' in training for a Cup Final at Naseby, but were groups of people struggling with limited success to reach agreement.

Other editions - View all

About the author (1990)

>

Bibliographic information