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Politics under the Later Stuarts - Party Conflict in a Divided Society 1660-1715 (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R2,113
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Politics under the Later Stuarts - Party Conflict in a Divided Society 1660-1715 (Paperback, New)
Series: Studies In Modern History
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This is the first major study to look at party politics in England
over the later Stuart period as a whole, from the inception of
party conflict in the reign of Charles II to its climax in the
great rage of party under Queen Anne. It deals not only with high
politics and with the organisation of the new parties, but also
with the ideological roots of party strife and their relation to
the partisan divisions that were simultaneously emerging in English
society. The book traces the origins of party back to the failure
of the Restoration settlement of 1660 to heal the wounds of a
nation profoundly unsettled by the turmoil of civil war and
republican experiment in government. There was disagreement over
just how much power the monarchy should be permitted; and
disagreement, too, over the nature of the desirable settlement in
the Church. As a result, political conflict developed along two
major axes: the constitutional axis, between those who championed
strong monarchy and those who envisaged a stronger role for
Parliament, and the religious axis, between the champions of High
Anglican intolerance and those sympathetic to Dissent. Having
charted these fault-lines in the political and social fabric of
post-Restoration England, Tim Harris goes on to provide a richly
detailed account of how these constitutional and religious tensions
worked themselves out - at Westminster and in society at large -
through the struggle between Whigs and Tories under the later
Stuarts. This is an original and important book for the scholar and
specialist. It combines synthesis of the latest scholarship with
the author's own archival research to offer compelling new insights
into the nature of the struggle betweenWhigs and Tories, and the
reasons why these bitter partisan rivalries cut so deeply into
English society during the period. Moreover, its chronological
range allows Professor Harris to examine important questions about
continuity and change in the political strife of these years which
have hitherto been left unexplored. It is also a book that is easy
for the student and non-specialist to enjoy, for Tim Harris brings
the conflicts of the time vividly alive to the modern reader. He
explains how the party configuration of subsequent British politics
emerged as it did in these crucial years - but he also shows why
the issues that underlay it were of such burning importance, and so
difficult to resolve, for the men and women who crowd his pages.
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