
This Book Examines How The Strategic Problem Of Containing Threats Of Religious War And Violence Shaped Political Culture And The Development Of The State In Britain And Ireland Between Elizabeth I's Last Serious Courtship And The Death Of James Vi And I. In Doing So It Shows How The Religious Politics Of England, Scotland And Ireland Were Thoroughly Intertwined With Each Other, And With Developments On The European Continent, Requiring A Treatment That Moves Beyond A Framework Of National History By Connecting Events In Different Countries In A Continuous Narrative. Specific Topics Covered Include The Interaction Of Religious And Dynastic Politics Not Only In Relations Between Royal Families But Among The Nobility And Gentry; Efforts By The Elizabethan State To Contain Threats Of Catholic Rebellions; The Often Fraught Relations Between The Elizabethan Regime And James Vi In Scotland; Cultural Attitudes Related To Military Entrepreneurship On Both Land And Sea; Challenges To Protestant State Power In Ireland; English Intervention In The Wars Of The Netherlands; The Interplay Between English And Scottish Conflicts Over Presbyterianism In The 1590s; Efforts To Create A More Integrated And Effective State Encompassing All Of Britain And Ireland After 1603; And The European Policies Of James Vi And I-- Provided By Publisher.
This book investigates how the persistent threat of religious violence and civil war dictated the evolution of state structures and political culture in Britain and Ireland from 1578 to 1625. R. Malcolm Smuts, a specialist in early modern British history, utilizes a comparative framework to analyze the interconnected nature of religious and dynastic politics. By synthesizing archival evidence and historical analysis, he argues that the development of the state cannot be understood through isolated national histories but must be viewed as a cohesive, transnational response to the instability of the era.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of early modern state formation, particularly for its success in integrating Irish and Scottish contexts into the broader British narrative. Scholars frequently note the depth of the author's research into the administrative and cultural pressures that defined the late Elizabethan and Jacobean periods.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2023-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford, United Kingdom ; Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
019195408X
ISBN-13:
9780191954085
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