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Cromwell's House of Lords - Politics, Parliaments and Constitutional Revolution, 1642-1660 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,243
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Cromwell's House of Lords - Politics, Parliaments and Constitutional Revolution, 1642-1660 (Hardcover)
Series: Studies in Early Modern Cultural, Political and Social History
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The final years of the Cromwellian Protectorate are usually written
off as a brief interlude on the inevitable road to Restoration.
This book galvanises this forgotten period of Interregnum studies
by providing the first thoroughstudy of the Cromwellian 'Other
House' - a new upper parliamentary chamber of nominated life peers
created in 1657. Despite the execution of Charles I and the
establishment of a kingless republic, the period of the English
Civil Wars and their aftermath is rarely described as one of
constitutional revolution. The notion that the 1650s were
politically conservative is exemplified by the tendency of
historians to fixate upon the offer of kingship to Oliver Cromwell
and his increasingly monarchical appearance. This book rethinks the
political history of the 1640s and 1650sby focusing instead upon
the upper parliamentary chamber. Besides exploring changing
attitudes towards the House of Lords during the Civil Wars, and the
circumstances that led to its abolition in 1649, it provides the
first thorough study of the Cromwellian "Other House" - a new upper
parliamentary chamber of nominated life peers created in 1657.
Jonathan Fizgibbons demonstrates how the Other House was much more
integral to Cromwell's aims for a lasting post-war settlement than
the offer of the Crown. More broadly, this book reconceptualises
the political and constitutional history of the 1640s and 1650s by
looking beyond outward forms of government and visual culture. It
argues that radical shifts in political thought were concealed by
apparent continuities in forms of government. Even though the new
Cromwellian upper chamber had the familiar appearance of a House of
Lords, the very meaning of the House of Lords was contested and
transformed by the experience of the Civil Wars and their
aftermath. JONATHAN FITZGIBBONS is Lecturer in Early Modern History
at the University of Lincoln.
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