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Paul Cavill offers a major reinterpretation of early Tudor
constitutional history. In the grand "Whig" tradition, the
parliaments of Henry VII were a disappointing retreat from the
onward march towards parliamentary democracy. The king was at best
indifferent and at worst hostile to parliament; its meetings were
cowed and quiescent, subservient to the royal will. Yet little
research has tested these assumptions.
Drawing on extensive archival research, Cavill challenges existing
accounts and revises our understanding of the period. Neither to
the king nor to his subjects did parliament appear to be a waning
institution, fading before the waxing power of the crown. For a
ruler in Henry's vulnerable position, parliament helped to restore
royal authority by securing the good governance that legitimated
his regime. For his subjects, parliament served as a medium through
which to communicate with the government and to shape--and, on
occasion, criticize--its policies. Because of the demands
parliament made, its impact was felt throughout the kingdom, among
ordinary people as well as among the elite. Cooperation between
subjects and the crown, rather than conflict, characterized these
parliaments.
While for many scholars parliament did not truly come of age until
the 1530s, when-freed from its medieval shackles-the modern
institution came to embody the sovereign nation state, in this
study Henry's reign emerges as a constitutionally innovative
period. Ideas of parliamentary sovereignty were already beginning
to be articulated. It was here that the foundations of the "Tudor
revolution in government" were being laid.
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