
Table of Contents
Aims and Acknowledgements
Quoting from Early Modern Texts
Illustrations
England’s Rulers From Richard II to Charles II
Timeline of Key Events
1 An Overview of Early Modern England
2 The Back-Story of the Tudor Dynasty: From Richard II to Henry VII
3 Henry VII, Henry VIII, and the Henrician Era (1509–47)
4 Edward VI, Lady Jane Grey, and Mary I (1547–53)
5 The Elizabethan Era (1558–1603)
6 The Reign of King James VI/I (1603–25)
7 Charles I (1625–42): from Accession to the Beginning of the Civil Wars
8 The Civil Wars, the Commonwealth, and the Early Restoration (1642–71)
Index
A Short History of Early
Modern England
This edition first published 2011
© 2011 Peter C. Herman
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Herman, Peter C., 1958–
A short history of early modern England : subjects, rulers and rebels / Peter C. Herman.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-1-4051-9560-7 (hardback)
1. Great Britain–History–Tudors, 1485–1603. 2. Great Britain–History–Stuarts, 1603–1714. 3. English literature–Early modern, 1500–1700. I. Title.
DA315.H44 2011
942.05–dc22
2010051057
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
This book is published in the following electronic formats: ePDFs 9781444394979; Wiley Online Library 9781444395006; ePub 9781444394993
Aims and Acknowledgements
A Short History of Early Modern England: British Literature in Context has a very simple purpose: to provide a survey of the backgrounds necessary to study the literature produced in early modern England. While editing two volumes for the Modern Language Association’s Approaches to Teaching series, I came across numerous complaints that students arrive in our classrooms innocent of the basic facts of the Tudor–Stuart era, a phenomenon backed up by much anecdotal evidence and studies illustrating the generally parlous state of historical knowledge. This book aims to help remedy this problem by providing a clear narrative of the period’s political history along with explanations of the age’s religious conflicts. A Short History of Early Modern England: British Literature in Context aims to answer such basic questions as who ruled when, what was the English Reformation, what exactly are the differences between Catholicism and Protestantism and between the various subdivisions among Protestants, what are the Wars of the Roses, why were the Elizabethans so obsessed with it, what happened between 1640 and 1660, and why does this period go by so many names? While any number of studies and guides place early modern literature in its historical contexts, these books all assume a fair amount of background knowledge on the reader’s part. A Short History of Early Modern England: British Literature in Context aims to provide that knowledge.
I have tried to stick to the facts, balancing narrative with quotations from primary sources. When I depart from convention, such as my decision to eschew the term, “Puritan,” I have made my decisions explicit. I also give brief explanations of the controversies among historians and why they are relevant to students of literature. Periodization is always tricky, since history does not proceed in easily definable segments, and I have been guided by what I hope would be most useful to a literature student. Consequently, the book begins with the deposition of Richard II and the consequences following that act (i.e. the Wars of the Roses), both because the events of this period are so important to the Tudor–Stuart era, and because they are dramatized by William Shakespeare in some of his most popular plays. I have chosen the publication of Milton’s final poetic works in 1674 as the endpoint, since that is when most classes in early modern literature conclude.
One point, however, deserves to be explained before going further: this book is largely “history from above” rather than “history from below.” My reason for this approach is not that I disagree with the latter or consider the history of working or illiterate people less worthy of note than the doings of kings and parliaments. Rather, I base my approach on my sense that wherever one rests on the social ladder, the monarch constituted the center of the political universe. When, for example, the Elizabethan pamphleteer and proto-novelist, Thomas Deloney, challenges the fundamental social organization of England, he does not imagine doing away with the monarchy altogether, but by having the monarch recognize the superiority of working people over the aristocracy. For a relatively brief period, the Interregnum (1649–60), a few tried to imagine England without a monarchy, but ultimately the experiment failed, and it failed even before the Restoration because Cromwell had to fend off numerous attempts to make him king. To write “history from below” without first taking into account the basic facts of “history from above” would, I think, lead to a warped view of the period’s literature.
Three tools have aided the research for this book immeasurably. First, Early English Books Online allows students access to nearly every book, pamphlet, proclamation, and newsbook printed in England between 1485 and 1700. Whenever possible, I have gone back to the original sources rather than relying on quotations in contemporary historians. Second, as a cursory glance at my notes will quickly indicate, I have relied heavily on The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, an extraordinary resource whose articles provide up-to-date, deeply scholarly, and yet entirely accessible biographies that are essential reading for anyone seeking to understand British history. The third source came as a surprise: Google Books and Archive.org. As most people know, Google decided some years ago to try to create a universal library by scanning I do not know how many out-of-print volumes from the major research libraries in North America. Consequently, such essential primary source resources such as Sir John Harington’s Nugae Antiquae (1804), and John Rushworth’s Historical Collections of Private Passages of State (1689) are now available to everyone with a web connection.
Finally, I have personal debts that I eagerly and gratefully acknowledge. Heidi Brayman Hackel, Anne Lake Prescott, and Johann P. Sommerville answered what must have seemed like a never-ending stream of queries with patience and learning. Peter Platt, Elizabeth Sauer, and Ronald Simon read and commented on each chapter as I finished it. I am also exceedingly grateful to the advice, enthusiasm, and patience provided by Emma Bennett, Isobel Bainton, and Ben Thatcher. Gillian Andrews was the ideal copy-editor. Finally, I gratefully thank the College of Arts and Letters at San Diego State University for a grant that helped pay for the illustrations. If this book has any merit, they deserve the praise. I gladly accept the blame.
Quoting from Early Modern Texts
Every book we read today comes with page numbers, and it seems self-evident that this is how books were organized. If you want to find a particular topic, go to page 32. Or 64. Or 102. But the technology for creating printed books in the early modern period demanded a different organization. Books in this period were printed by a hand press, and a single large sheet of paper would be imprinted on each side with 2, 4, 8 or even more pages of type, depending on the intended size of the book (which roughly correlated with the book’s cost). These pages would then be folded in half for a folio, twice for a quarto, four times for an octavo, and so on, and then collected with the other sheets to form a book. To keep track of the correct order of sheets and folds, the print shop identified each fold with a letter of the alphabet, and if the book went beyond the 26th letter, they started over again, using double letters, then triple letters, etc. These are called signatures. Because numerical pagination is notoriously unreliable in this period, the convention is to refer to the signature number (the contraction is “sig.”) rather than the page number, and to identify the left or right side of the page by adding a “v” for verso (the left) or an “r” for recto (the right). Consequently, in the notes, readers will find references to such signature numbers as “A2v” or “B4r.”
For greater comprehension, I have modernized all quotations, regardless of whether they come from early modern or contemporary editions or books.
Illustrations
Figure 3.1 | King Henry VIII; King Henry VII by |
Figure 5.1 | Queen Elizabeth I (‘The Ditchley portrait’) |
Figure 6.1 | King James I of England and VI of Scotland |
Figure 7.1 | King Charles I after Sir Anthony Van Dyck, |
Figure 8.1 | Historiaels verhael, Van de Geboorte, |
Figure 8.2 | Oliver Cromwell by Robert Walker. |
England’s Rulers From Richard II to Charles II
Richard II | 1377–99 |
Henry IV | 1399–1413 |
Henry V | 1413–22 |
Henry VI | 1422–61 (deposed); 1470–71 |
Edward IV | 1461–1470 (deposed); 1471–83 |
Richard III | 1483–85 |
Henry VII | 1485–1509 |
Henry VIII | 1509–47 |
Edward VI | 1547–1553 |
Lady Jane Gray | July 10–19, 1553 |
Mary Tudor | 1553–1558 |
Elizabeth I | 1558–1603 |
James VI/I | 1603–25 |
Charles I | 1625–49 |
Parliament (the Commonwealth) | 1649–1654 |
Oliver Cromwell (Lord Protector) | 1654–58 |
Richard Cromwell (Lord Protector) | 1658–59 |
Charles II | 1660–85 |
Timeline of Key Events
1377 | Death of Edward III; accession of Richard II |
1381 | Peasant’s Revolt |
1399 | Richard resigns the crown to Henry Bolingbroke, who becomes Henry IV |
1415 | October 25, Battle of Agincourt |
1422 | Henry VI becomes king after father dies |
1440s | Disorder caused by Henry VI’s poor rule |
1450 | Jack Cade Rebellion |
1453 | Henry VI incapacitated by madness |
1455 | 1st battle of St. Albans, start of War of the Roses |
1461 | Henry VI deposed by Edward of York (Edward IV) |
1470 | Edward IV briefly deposed |
1471 | Edward IV re-deposes Henry VI; 4 May, Battle of Tewkesbury, end of Lancastrian line |
1483 | Richard, Duke of Gloucester murders Edward IV’s children, crowned on July 6 |
1485 | Henry Tudor defeats Richard III on 22 August, the Battle of Bosworth Field, becomes Henry VII and begins the Tudor dynasty |
1509 | Death of Henry VII, accession of Henry VIII |
1530 | Fall of Cardinal Thomas Wolsey |
1533 | Henry VIII divorces Katherine of Aragon, marries Anne Boleyn; Act in Restraint of Appeals passed |
1534 | Act of Supremacy designating Henry VIII (and all future English monarchs) “Supreme Head” of the Church of England |
1535 | Execution of Sir Thomas More |
1536 | Act for dissolution of smaller monasteries; Henry VIII beheads Anne Boleyn, marries Jane Seymour, who dies giving birth to Edward IV; execution of William Tyndale |
1536–37 | Pilgrimage of Grace |
1539 | Act of the Six Articles; Act for dissolution of larger monasteries; parishes required to purchase and display “Great Bible” |
1540 | Henry VIII marries Anna of Cleves, marriage annulled; then marries Catherine Howard; execution of Thomas Cromwell |
1542 | Catherine Howard beheaded |
1543 | Henry VIII marries Katherine Parr |
1547 | Henry VIII dies, Edward VI crowned |
1549 | Kett’s Rebellion; first Book of Common Prayer |
1552 | Execution of Thomas Seymour; John Dudley, Duke of Northumberland becomes Lord Protector; revised Book of Common Prayer |
1553 | Edward VI dies, Protestant Lady Jane Grey queen for nine days; Catholic Mary Tudor becomes queen of England; England shifts from Protestantism to Catholicism |
1554 | Royal Supremacy repealed; revival of heresy Acts |
1555 | Protestant “heretics” burned at stake |
1558 | Death of Queen Mary, accession of Elizabeth I; England shifts back to Protestantism |
1559 | Act of Uniformity, Queen Elizabeth “Supreme Governor” of Church of England |
1563 | Thirty-Nine Articles (doctrinal formulary for the Elizabethan Settlement) |
1562 | John Hawkins and Francis Drake start English trade in slaves |
1562–98 | French wars of Religion |
1567–98 | Dutch revolt against Spanish rule |
1568 | Mary, Queen of Scots flees to England |
1586 | Mary, Queen of Scots executed |
1588 | Defeat of Spanish Armada |
1594–98 | Major crop failures, “Crisis of the 1590s” |
1598–1603 | O’Neill rebellion in Ireland |
1601 | Essex conspiracy |
1603 | Death of Elizabeth I; accession of James VI/I (sixth of that name to rule Scotland; first to rule England) |
1604 | Hampton Court Conference |
1605 | Gunpowder Plot |
1606 | Bate’s Case |
1610 | Whitehall Speech declaring monarchy the “supremest thing on earth” |
1611 | King James Bible |
1612 | Death of Prince Henry, Charles now heir to the throne |
1613 | Princess Elizabeth marries Frederick, Elector Palatine; Overbury scandal |
1614 | “Addled” Parliament |
1615 | Rise of George Villiers, eventually Duke of Buckingham, starts |
1618–48 | Thirty Years War |
1619 | Death of James’s wife, Anna of Denmark |
1620 | Mayflower sails to New World |
1622–23 | Charles and Buckingham travel to Spain |
1624 | England declares war on Spain |
1625 | Death of James VI/I; Charles I ascends to throne |
1626–29 | War with France, failed naval expeditions |
1627 | Five Knights’ Case |
1628 | Petition of Right; Buckingham assassinated August 23 |
1629 | Charles dissolves third Parliament, 12 years of “personal rule”; peace with France (1629), peace with Spain (1630) |
1633 | William Laud made Archbishop of Canterbury |
1634 | Ship Money imposed |
1637 | Ship Money Case |
1638 | Attempt to impose Laudian Protestantism in Scotland; National Covenant in Scotland |
1638–39 | First Bishop’s War |
1640 | Second Bishop’s War; Short Parliament |
1640 | Long Parliament convenes April 13 (will meet until 1653); Root and Branch petition to end episcopacy; imprisonment of Laud; end of licensing; George Thomason starts collecting books, pamphlets, and newsbooks |
1641 | Grand Remonstrance; rebellion in Ireland, Protestant settlers slaughtered; impeachment and execution of Strafford |
1642 | Attempt to arrest Pym; March, Militia Ordinance; August 22, Charles raises standard at Nottingham, Civil Wars begin (Battle of Edgehill); closing of the public theatres |
1643 | Parliament aligns with Scots (Solemn League and Covenant); Charles I allies with Irish |
1644 | Royalist defeat at Marston Moor means Charles I lost; Self-Denying Ordinance proposed |
1645 | Laud executed; New Model Army formed; Parliamentary victory at Naseby |
1646 | Charles surrenders to Scots; end of First Civil War |
1647 | Charles delivered to Parliament by Scots; Putney Debates |
1648 | No Further Addresses to King; Second Civil War; Pride’s Purge (remainder of Long Parliament now “The Rump”) |
1649 | Charles I executed; Cromwell goes to Ireland, massacres in Drogheda and Wexford; Digger colonies established |
1650 | Cromwell returns from Ireland; defeats Scots at Battle of Dunbar; Blasphemy Act |
1651 | Charles II goes into exile |
1652 | 1st Anglo-Dutch war |
1653 | Cromwell forcibly dissolves Rump; April–December, Nominated Assembly or “Barbebone’s Parliament”; Instrument of Government installs Cromwell as Lord Protector |
1655 | Penruddick’s Rising; rule of Major-Generals; readmission of the Jews |
1657 | Cromwell offered crown and refuses |
1658 | Cromwell dies, succeeded by son, Richard |
1659 | Political chaos |
1660 | April, declaration of Breda and Restoration of Charles II; theaters re-open; Royal Society established |
1661–65 | “Clarendon Code” legislation against nonconformists passed |
1665 | 2nd Anglo-Dutch War begins; Great Plague in London |
1666 | Great Fire of London |
1667 | 2nd Anglo-Dutch War concluded |
Map 0.1 The Countries of England and Wales before 1972.