List of Plates
List of Maps
Preface to the Second Edition
Preface to the First Edition
Acknowledgments
Conventions and Abbreviations
Introduction: England and its People, ca. 1485
This Sceptered Isle
This Seat of Mars – and Less Happier Lands
This England
This Happy Breed
The Mental World of the English People, ca. 1485
Chapter One Establishing the Henrician Regime, 1485–1525
The Wars of the Roses, 1455–85
Establishing the Tudor State
Young King Hal
The Great Cardinal
War and Diplomacy
Chapter Two (Dis-)Establishing the Henrician Church, 1525–1536
The King’s Great Matter
The Attack on the Church
The Royal Supremacy
Reaction
A Tudor Revolution?
Chapter Three Reformations and Counter-Reformations, 1536–1558
Catholic or Protestant?
Marriage, Succession, and Foreign Policy
Henry VIII’s Last Years
The New King, the Lord Protector, and the Legacy of Henry VIII
Northumberland and the Protestant Reformation
Mary I and Marital Diplomacy
Catholic Restoration
Foreign Policy and the Succession
Chapter Four The Elizabethan Settlement and its Challenges, 1558–1585
The New Queen
Cecil vs. Dudley
Marital Diplomacy I
The Religious Settlement
The Puritan Challenge
The Catholic Threat
England and Scotland
England and Spain
Plots and Counter-Plots
Marital Diplomacy II
Chapter Five The Elizabethan Triumph and Unsettlement, 1585–1603
What about Mary?
The Spanish Armada
The War at Sea and on the Continent
The War(s) in Ireland
Crises of the 1590s
Chapter Six Merrie Olde England?, ca. 1603
Population Expansion and Economic Crisis
The Social Order
The Gender Order
Elite Private Life
Commoners’ Private Life
Religion
Paternalism and Deference
Kinship and Neighborliness
Poverty and Charity
Law and (Dis)order
Trade, Exploration, and Colonization
Cultural Life
Chapter Seven The Early Stuarts and the Three Kingdoms, 1603–1642
The Problem of Government Finance
The Problem of Foreign Policy, War, and England’s Place in Europe
The Problem of Religion
The Personal Rule and the Problem of Local Authority
The Crisis of Scotland
The Long Parliament
The Crisis of Ireland
Chapter Eight Civil War, Revolution, and the Search for Stability, 1642–1660
Rebellion, 1642–6
Revolution, 1646–9
The Radical Hydra?
Commonwealth, Protectorate, and the Search for Stability, 1649–58
The Restoration, 1658–60
Chapter Nine Restoration and Revolution, 1660–1689
The Restoration Settlements, 1660–5
Charles II and the Unraveling of the Restoration Settlements
Problems of Sovereignty, Finance, Religion, and Foreign Policy, 1660–70
The Declaration of Indulgence and the Third Dutch War, 1670–3
The Earl of Danby and the Court and Country Blocs, 1673–8
The Popish Plot, Exclusion Crisis, and Loss of Local Control, 1678–81
The Tory Revenge and Reestablishment of Local Control, 1681–5
James II and the Attempt at a Catholic Restoration, 1685–8
The Glorious Revolution, 1688–9
Chapter Ten War and Politics, 1689–1714
William III, Mary II, and the English People
The Revolution in Scotland and Ireland, 1688–92
The War and the Parties, 1688–97
The Rise of the Whig Junto, 1693–97
The Tory Resurgence, 1697–1701
The Spanish and English Successions, 1700–2
Anne and the Rage of Party
The War, the Union, and the Parties, 1702–10
The Queen’s Revenge, 1710
The Treaty of Utrecht, 1710–13
The Oxford Ministry, 1710–14
Conclusion: Augustan Polity, Society, and Culture, ca. 1714
Notes
Introduction: England and its People, ca. 1485
1 Establishing the Henrician Regime, 1485–1525
2 (Dis-)Establishing the Henrician Church, 1525–1536
3 Reformations and Counter-Reformations, 1536–1558
4 The Elizabethan Settlement and its Challenges, 1558–1585
5 The Elizabethan Triumph and Unsettlement, 1585–1603
6 Merrie Olde England?, ca. 1603
7 The Early Stuarts and the Three Kingdoms, 1603–1642
8 Civil War, Revolution, and the Search for Stability, 1642–1660
9 Restoration and Revolution, 1660–1689
10 War and Politics, 1689–1714
Conclusion: Augustan Polity, Society, and Culture, ca. 1714
Glossary
Select Bibliography
Introduction
General
Pre-Tudor (1400s–1485)
Tudor (1485–1603)
Stuart (1603–1714)
Documents and Other Primary Sources
Appendix: Genealogies
1 The Yorkists and Lancastrians
2 The Tudors and Stuarts
3 The Stuarts and Hanoverians
Index
To our parents, with gratitude and love
Lillian Aguirre Bucholz in memory of Robert Edward Bucholz
Cornelia Buck Key
H. Newton Key
This second edition first published 2009
© 2009 Robert Bucholz and Newton Key
Edition history: Blackwell Publishing Ltd (1e, 2004)
Blackwell Publishing was acquired by John Wiley & Sons in February 2007. Blackwell’s publishing program has been merged with Wiley’s global Scientific, Technical, and Medical business to form Wiley-Blackwell.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bucholz, R. O., 1958–Early modern England, 1485–1714: a narrative history / Robert Bucholz and Newton Key. – 2nd ed.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-4051-6275-3 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Great Britain–History– Stuarts, 1603–1714.
2. Great Britain–History–Tudors, 1485–1603.
3. England–Civilization. I. Key, Newton. II. Title.
DA300.B83 2009
942.05–dc22
2008030352
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
1 2009
1 Diagram of an English manor
2 Henry VII, painted terracotta bust, by Pietro Torrigiano
3 Henry VIII, after Hans Holbein the Younger
4 Diagram of the interior of a church before and after the Reformation
5 Mary I, by Moro
6 J. Foxe, Acts and Monuments title-page, 1641 edition
7 Elizabeth I (The Ditchley Portrait), by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, ca. 1592
8 First Encounter Between the English and Spanish Fleets, from J. Pine, The Tapestry Hangings of the House of Lords Representing the Several Engagements Between the English and Spanish Fleets, 1739
9 Hatfield House, south prospect, by Thomas Sadler, 1700
10 Tudor farmhouse at Ystradfaelog, Llanwnnog, Montgomeryshire (photo and groundplan)
11 Visscher’s panorama of London, 1616 (detail)
12 A view of Westminster, by Hollar
13 James I, by van Somer
14 George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, by William Larkin
15 Charles I, by Van Dyck
16 The execution of Charles I
17 Oliver Cromwell, by Robert Walker, 1649
18 The entrance of Charles II at the Restoration, 1660
19 Charles II as Patron of the Royal Society, by Laroon
20 James II, by unknown artist
21 Mary of Modena in Childbed, Italian engraving
22 Presentation of the Crown to William III and Mary II, by R. de Hooge after C. Allard
23 Queen Anne, by Edmund Lilly
24 The battle of Blenheim
25 Fighting in a coffee-house after the trial of Dr. Sacheverell
26 Castle Howard, engraving
Maps
1 The British Isles (physical) today
2 The counties of England and Wales before 1972
3 Towns and trade
4 The Wars of the Roses, 1455–85
5 Southern England and western France during the later Middle Ages
6 Europe ca. 1560
7 Early modern Ireland
8 Spanish possessions in Europe and the Americas
9 War in Europe, 1585–1604
10 London ca.1600
11 The Bishops’ Wars and Civil Wars, 1637–60
12 Western Europe in the age of Louis XIV
13 The War of the Spanish Succession, 1702–14
14 The Atlantic world after the Treaty of Utrecht, 1713
Preface to the Second Edition
The appearance of a second edition of Early Modern England is most welcome to its authors, not least because it allows them to correct the errors which inevitably crept into the first. The opportunity of a “do-over” is also a chance to bring the narrative up to date by incorporating exciting new material on the period which has come out since the first edition, not to mention older material which we had neglected previously. (The companion volume, Sources and Debates, has also been extensively revised in its 2nd edition.) In particular, the authors have attempted to take into account recent Tudor historiography and strengthen those sections which address Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. We have also become more conscious of the continental and Atlantic dimensions of this story and have adjusted accordingly. We have added a section on the historiography of women and gender, modifying our presentation of women’s lives in light of a more nuanced history of gender, which sees the story of men and women as more intermingled, and which gives early modern women agency rather than pities them as perennial victims.
At the same time, your faithful authors have resisted the temptation to make of this story something that it is not: a history of the British Isles, the Atlantic world, of Europe as a whole, or even a transnational story of a very mobile people. We are deeply aware and appreciative of new historiographical currents which view England and the English within each of these four contexts. We have made a conscious effort to take account of those contexts, and to strengthen them for this edition. But we have not attempted to tell a trans-British Isles, Atlantic, Britain- in-Europe, or migrants story precisely because these are, in fact, many stories, the narrative threads of which inevitably become tangled and broken if contained within a single book. Indeed, Welsh and Irish historians have recently reacted with some skepticism to an all-embracing “three kingdoms” British Isles approach. Thus, we stand by our initial position that an English narrative retains a coherence that such wider perspectives lack; and that that narrative is of particular importance for the Western and Anglophone world. This last conviction has only been strengthened by the experience of the last few years, which have seen serious debates on our side of the Atlantic over the rights of habeas corpus and freedom from unreasonable search and seizure, the parliamentary power of the purse, the role of religion in public life, and whether or not the ruler can declare himself above the law in a time of national emergency. These were themes well known to early modern English men and women. They remain utterly – even alarmingly – relevant to their political, social, and cultural heirs on both sides of the Atlantic.
Which brings us to a final word about the audience for this book. When we first undertook to write it, we set out self-consciously to provide a volume which would tell England’s story to our fellow countrymen and women in ways that would be most accessible to them. That implied a willingness to explain what an expert or a native Briton might take for granted; and to do so in a language accessible to the twenty-first-century student. Since its initial publication, Early Modern England has had some success on both sides of the Atlantic, not least, it turns out, because, as the early modern period recedes from secondary training in History in Great Britain, the twenty-first-century British student cannot be assumed any longer to have become familiar with – or jaded by – this story. And so, as we have undertaken this revision, we have tried to become more sensitive to its potential British, as well as Canadian, Australian, New Zealand, and other Anglophone readers, while retaining the peculiar charms of the American vernacular. It is in the spirit of transatlantic and global understanding and cooperation that we welcome all our readers from the Anglophone world to a story which forms the bedrock of their shared heritage.
Preface to the First Edition
The authors of this book recall, quite vividly, their first exposure to English history. If you are like us, you first came to this subject because contemporary elite and popular culture are full of references to it. Perhaps your imagination has been captured by a classic play or novel set in the English past (Richard III, A Man for All Seasons, Journal of the Plague Year, Lorna Doone), or by some Hollywood epic which uses English history as its frame (Braveheart, Elizabeth, Shakespeare in Love, Restoration, The Patriot). Perhaps you have traveled in England, or can trace your roots to an English family tree (or to ancestors whose relationship to the English was less than happy). Perhaps you have sensed – rightly – that poets and playwrights, Hollywood and tour books have not given you the whole story. Perhaps you want to know more.
In writing this book, we have tried to recall what we knew and what we did not know about England when we first began to study it as undergraduates. We have also tried to use what we have learned over the years from teaching its history to (mostly) our fellow North Americans in a variety of institutions – Ivy League and extension; state and private; secular and sectarian. Thus, we have tried to explain concepts that might be quite familiar to a native of England, and have become familiar to us, but which may, at first, make little sense to you. To help you make your way through early modern England we have begun with a description of the country as it existed in 1485, and included several maps of it and its neighbors. We have highlighted arcane contemporary words and historical terminology in bold on their first use, and tried to explain their meaning in a Glossary. We urge you to use these as you would use maps and language phrase books to negotiate any foreign land. When we introduce for the first time a native of early modern England, we give his or her birth and death dates, where known. In the case of kings and queens, we also give the years they reigned. We do this because knowing when someone came of age (or, if he was a Tudor politician, whether or not he managed to survive Henry VIII!) should give you a better idea of what events and ideas might have shaped his or her motivations, decisions, and destiny.
Thinking about historical characters as real people faced with real choices, fighting real battles, and living through real events should help you to make sense of the connections we make below and, we hope, to see other connections and distinctions on your own.
The following text is, for the most part, a narrative, with analytical chapters at strategic points to present information from those subfields (geography, topography, social, economic, and cultural history) in which many of the most recent advances have been made, but for which a narrative is inappropriate. That narrative largely tells a story of English politics, the relations between rulers and ruled, in the Tudor period (1485–1603, chapters 1–5) and the Stuart period (1603–1714, chapters 7–10). Chapter 1 includes a brief narrative of the immediate background to the accession of the Tudors in 1485, the Conclusion, a few pages on the aftermath of Stuart rule from 1714. We believe, and hope to demonstrate, that the political developments of the Tudor–Stuart period have meaning and relevance to all inhabitants of the modern world, but especially to Americans. We also believe that a narrative of those developments provides a coherent and convenient device for student learning and recollection. Finally, because we also think that the economic, social, cultural, religious, and intellectual lives of English men and women are just as important a part of their story as the politics of the period, we will remind you frequently that the history of England is not simply the story of the English monarchy, or its relations with Parliament. It is also the story of every man, woman or child who lived, loved, fought, and died in England during the period covered by this book. Therefore, we will stop the narrative to encounter those lives at three points: ca. 1485 (Introduction), 1603 (chapter 6), and 1714 (Conclusion).
In order to provide a text which is both reader-friendly and interesting, we have tried to deliver it in prose which is clear and, where the material lends itself, not entirely lacking in drama or humor (with what success you, the readers, will judge). In particular, we have tried to provide accurate but compelling accounts of the great “set pieces” of the period; quotations which will stand the test of memory; and examples which enliven as well as inform while avoiding as much as possible the sort of jargon and minutiae that can sometimes put off otherwise enthusiastic readers. Again, this is all part of a conscious pedagogical strategy born of our experience in the classroom.
That experience has also caused us to realize the importance of “doing history”: of students and readers discovering the richness of early modern England for themselves through contemporary sources; making their own arguments about the past based on interpreting those sources; and, thus, becoming historians (if only for a semester). For that reason, we have also assembled and written a companion to this book entitled Sources and Debates in English History, 1485–1714 (also published by Blackwell). The preface to that book indicates how its specific chapters relate to chapters in this one (see also chapter notes at the end of this book).
A word about our title and focus. One might ask why we called our book Early Modern England, rather than Early Modern Britain? After all, one of the most useful recent trends in history has been to remind us that at least four distinct peoples share the British Isles and that the English “story” cannot be told in isolation from those of the Irish, the Scots, and the Welsh. (Not to mention continental Europeans, North Americans, Africans, and, toward the end of the story, Asians as well.) We agree. For that reason the text contains significant sections on English involvement with each of the Celtic peoples (as well as some discussion of England’s relationship to the other groups noted above) in the early modern period, all of which are vital for our overall argument. But we believe that it is the English story that will be of most relevance to Americans at the beginning of the twenty-first century. We believe this, in part, because it was most relevant to who Americans were at the beginning of their own story, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. We would argue, further, that English notions of right and proper behavior, rights and responsibilities, remain central to national discourse in both Canada and the United States today. Important as have been the cultural inheritance of Ireland, Scotland, and Wales to Americans, the impetus for the inhabitants of each of these countries to cross the Atlantic was always English, albeit often oppressive. Moreover, brutal and exploitative as actual English behavior has often been toward these peoples, the ideals of representative government, rule of law, freedom of the press, religious toleration, even a measure of social mobility, meritocracy, and racial and gender equality which some early modern English men and women fought for and which the nation as a whole slowly (and often partially) came to embrace, are arguably the most important legacy to us of any European culture.
Finally, as in our own classes, we look forward to your feedback. What (if anything!) did you enjoy? What made no sense? Where did we go on too long? Where did we tell you too little? Please feel free to let us know at earlymodernengland@ yahoo.com. In the meantime, there is an old, wry saying about the experience of “living in interesting times.” As you will soon see, the men and women of early modern England lived in very interesting times. As a result, exploring their experience may sometimes be arduous, but we anticipate that it will never be dull.
Acknowledgments
No one writes a work of synthesis without contracting a great debt to the many scholars who have labored on monographs and other works. The authors are no exception; our bibliography and notes point to some of the many historians who have become our reliable friends in print if not necessarily in person. We would also like to acknowledge with thanks our own teachers (particularly Dan Baugh, the late G. V. Bennett, Colin Brooks, P. G. M. Dickson, Clive Holmes, Michael MacDonald, Alan Macfarlane, the late Frederick Marcham, and David Underdown), our colleagues, and our students (whose questions over the years have spurred us to a greater clarity than we would have achieved on our own). A special debt is owed to the anonymous readers for the press, whose care to save us from our own errors is much appreciated – even in the few cases where we have chosen to persist in them. We have also benefited greatly from our attendance at seminars and conferences, most notably the Midwest Conference on British Studies, and from hearing papers given by, among others, Lee Beier, Ethan Shagan, Hilda Smith and Retha Warnicke. For advice, assistance, and comment on specific points, we would like to thank Andrew Barclay, Fr. Robert Bireley, SJ, Barrett Beer, Mary Boyd, Regina Buccola, Eric Carlson, Erin Crawley, Brendan Daly, Carolyn Edie, Gary DeKrey, David Dennis, Alan Gitelson, Bridget Godwin, Michael Graham, Mark Fissel, Jo Hays, Roz Hays, Caroline Hibbard, Theodore Karamanski, Carole Levin, Kathleen Manning, Eileen McMahon, Gerard McDonald, Marcy Millar, Paul Monod, Philip Morgan, Matthew Peebles, Jeannette Pierce, James Rosenheim, Barbara Rosenwein, James Sack, Lesley Skousen, Johann Sommerville, Robert Tittler, Joe Ward, Patrick Woodland, Mike Young, Melinda Zook, and the members of H-Albion. We are grateful for the support, advice, and efficiency of Tessa Harvey, Brigitte Lee, Angela Cohen, Janey Fisher, and all the staff at Wiley-Blackwell. We have also received valuable feedback from students across the country and, in particular at Dominican University, Eastern Illinois University, Loyola University, the University of Nebraska, and the Newberry Library Undergraduate Seminar. Our immediate family members have been particularly patient and accommodating. We would especially like to thank Laurie Bucholz for keeping this marriage (not Bob and Laurie but Bob and Newton) together. For this, and much more besides, we thank them all.
Conventions and Abbreviations
Citations | Spelling and punctuation modernized for early modern quotations, except in titles cited. |
Currency | Though we refer mainly to pounds and shillings in the text, English currency included guineas (one pound and one shilling) and pennies (12 pence made one shilling). One pound (£) = 20 shillings (s.) = 240 pence (d.). |
Dates | Throughout the early modern period the English were still using the Julian calendar, which was 10–11 days behind the more accurate Gregorian calendar in use on the continent from 1582. The British would not adopt the Gregorian calendar until the middle of the eighteenth century. Further, the year began on March 25. We give dates according to the Julian calendar, but assume the year to begin on January 1. Where possible, we provide the birth and death dates of individuals when first mentioned in the text. In the case of monarchs, we also provide regnal dates for their first mention as monarchs. |
BCE | Before the common era (equivalent to the older and now viewed as more narrowly ethnocentric designation BC, i.e., Before Christ). |
BL | British Library. |
CE | Common era (equivalent to AD). |
Fr | Father (Catholic priest). |
JP | Justice of the peace (see Glossary). |
MP | Member of Parliament, usually members of the House of Commons. |
Long before the events described in this book, long before there was an English people, state, or crown, the land they would call home had taken shape. Its terrain would mold them, as they would mold it. And so, to understand the people of early modern England and their experience, it is first necessary to know the geographical, topographical, and material reality of their world. Geography is, to a great extent, Destiny.
The first thing that most non-British people think that they know about England is that it is an island. In fact, this is not strictly true. England is, rather, the southern and eastern portion of a group of islands (an archipelago) in the North Sea known as the British Isles (see map 1). While the whole of the archipelago would be ruled from London by the end of the period covered by this book, and while the terms “Great Britain” and “British” have, at times, been applied to that whole, it should never be forgotten that the archipelago is home to four distinct peoples, each with their own national histories and customs: the English, the Irish, the Scots, and the Welsh.1 This book will concentrate on the experience of the first of these peoples. But because that experience intertwines with that of the other three, the following pages address their histories as well.
While the English may share their island, they have always defined themselves as an “island people.” That fact is crucial to understanding them, for an “island people” are bound to embrace an “island mentality.” One place to begin to understand what this means is with a famous passage by England’s greatest poet, William Shakespeare (1564–1616):
This royal throne of kings, this sceptr’d isle,
This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,
This other Eden, demi-paradise:
This fortress built by Nature for herself
Against infection and the hand of war;
This happy breed of men, this little world,
This precious stone set in the silver sea,
Which serves it in the office of a wall,
Or as a moat defensive to a house,
Against the envy of less happier lands:
This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England. (Richard II 2.1)
John of Gaunt’s dying speech from The Tragedy of King Richard II is justly famous, not least because it says a great deal about how the English view their land. The most obvious point to make about these words (apart from their overt patriotism) is that they portray the water surrounding the British Isles as a barrier. Specifically, England is separated from the mainland of Europe (and France, in particular) by the English Channel, a strait about 21 miles wide at its narrowest (see map 1). This is the “moat defensive” which “serves it [England] in the office of a wall.”
The Channel has, indeed, served England as a moat defensive against foreign invaders on a number of occasions in its history. As we shall see in chapter 5, in 1588 it prevented invasion by the armies of Philip II, who were to have been transported by the Spanish Armada. In 1805, after the period of time covered by this book, it would block a similar attempt by the armies of Napoleon Bonaparte. And in 1940, within the living memory of some readers, it would frustrate “Operation Sealion,” Hitler’s plan for invasion and occupation by the forces of Nazi Germany. Thus, the English Channel and Great Britain’s island status have been crucial to the preservation of England (and, later, Britain) as a sovereign country, with its own distinct traditions of government and social customs.
Less tangibly, the English have sometimes thought that the English Channel shielded them from continental ways and ideas. One of the most obvious facts about the English is that they are not the French or the Dutch. Their political, social, and cultural institutions developed along different lines from those of their continental neighbors. This has sometimes led the English to believe that they are set apart from those neighbors, a “little world,” protected by their watery moat from “infection and the hand of war.” To believe that one is set apart, that one’s situation is unlike others, is very close to believing that one is unique. This is, in turn, just a step away from believing that one is somehow superior to others, “the envy of less happier lands.” Perhaps as a result of this feeling, English governments have sometimes acted, first toward the other inhabitants of the British Isles, and later toward the subjects of a worldwide British Empire, as if “God was an Englishman” and that the remaining inhabitants of the planet had been given by Him to be conquered, exploited, even enslaved, by His chosen people. But, for the most part, the “island mentality” is not so much hostile or aggressive as it is indifferent, even mildly condescending, toward Europe. Hence a famous, if apocryphal, nineteenth-century headline: “Fog in Channel; Continent Cut Off.”
But in fact, most of the time, there is no fog in the Channel and England and the continent are not cut off from each other. This brings us to the other side of the watery coin: the “island mentality” is, to a great extent, a sham, for the English Channel has more often acted as much as a highway or a bridge to Europe than as a barrier. For most of human history, before the invention of the airplane or the automobile, the easiest and safest way to get from place to place was by water. It is true that the Channel, and England’s control of it, prevented the invasions of 1588, 1805, and 1940. But England faced many other invasions in its history, most of which the Channel facilitated. In fact, the people and polity of early modern England were products of successful migrations, indeed invasions, by the Celts from 800 to 200 BCE (before the common era, see Conventions and Abbreviations), the Romans in the first century CE (during the common era, see Conventions and Abbreviations), the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes in the fifth and sixth centuries, the Danes in the ninth and tenth centuries, the Normans in 1066, and, within the time frame of this book, the Dutch in 1688.
Since all of these people decided to settle in England, the notion of English uniqueness must be qualified by the realization that they were and are, like contemporary Americans, a mixture of many different ethnic groups and cultures: those noted above; Welsh, Scots, and Huguenots during the period of this book; and, more recently, Irish, West Indians, Indians, Pakistanis, and others. The people, the culture, even the language of England were forged in a melting pot. Take, for example, the English language. Today, one will occasionally hear commentators complain of the infusion of new words and phrases, slang or sloppiness of speech emanating from the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, or even parts of Britain itself which are distant in space and attitude from Oxford or London. In their view, these emanations corrupt the “purity” of the Queen’s English. The trouble with this view is that the Queen’s English was never pure. It is, rather, a mongrel born of and enriched by Celtic, Latin, Anglo-Saxon, Danish, French, and Dutch influences. Moreover, even within England itself (and certainly within the British Isles), it has always been spoken with a wide variety of regional accents, vocabulary, and syntax. In short, the English language was, and is, a living, evolving construct.
Migrations and invasions are not the only way in which new cultural influences have come to England. Because water surrounds the British Isles and water serves as a highway as well as a moat, it was probably inevitable that, in order to defend their country and buy and sell their goods, the English would become seafarers. (Obviously, many had to be seafarers to get there in the first place.) This implies a naval tradition in order to protect the islands: this book will return again and again to the admittedly unsteady rise of English naval power. But it also implies a tradition of peaceful overseas trade and the domestic industries that go with it (shipbuilding, carpentry, and cartography, for example). By 1714 the English would be the greatest shipbuilding and trading nation on earth, with London rivaling Amsterdam as its greatest money market. Though they have since relinquished those distinctions, trade and tourism, facilitated by the Channel Tunnel and membership in the European Union, continue to flow freely between England and the continent, and London remains one of the world’s leading financial capitals.
The wealth from trade and high finance would, in the eighteenth century, lead to military and naval dominance overseas and industrial growth at home. Another theme of this book is how England rose from being a puny and relatively poor little country in the fifteenth century to the dominant kingdom in a state, Great Britain, on the verge of superpower status, in the eighteenth. By the end of the era covered by this book, Great Britain (created when England and Scotland united in 1707) would be the most powerful state in Europe; it would rule an extensive overseas empire; and it would possess the economic base to launch the industrial revolution. In the nineteenth century, after the period covered by this book, that combination of military, naval, and industrial might would make Britain the center of an empire that would cover one-fifth of the globe and rule one-quarter of its people. The legacy of that empire is ever-present and controversial for the descendants of those who ruled it and those who were ruled by it. So a very great deal came of England’s being part of an island.
As this implies, if the “island people” have had a profound impact upon other peoples, so has contact with those peoples and cultures had a profound influence upon them. English people share with Americans the conviction that “imported” often means “better,” whether the item in question is French wine, German automobiles, or Italian art. Indeed, it could be argued that part of the friction that existed between England and France for so much of the period covered by this book was born, on the English side, not of blind hatred or haughty disdain, but of a sometimes sneaking admiration, even envy, for the achievements of French culture.
Up to this point, we have generally referred to “England,” not Britain. Non- Britons sometimes use the terms “English” and “British” interchangeably, but, as indicated above, that is both inaccurate and insulting to the four distinct cultures which inhabit the British Isles. These cultures, though dominated from London during most of the last few hundred years, are geographically, ethnically, and culturally distinct.
England, to the south and east, is by far the most populous, the wealthiest and the most powerful country, politically and militarily, in the British Isles. We will explore England’s internal geography and topography later in this introduction. For now, the important thing to remember is that this is the part of the British Isles closest to Europe, and, therefore, most easily invaded and colonized. As indicated previously, the land that would come to be known as England was, like the rest of the British Isles, settled by Celtic peoples who came over in many waves prior to about 200 BCE.2 From this point England’s experience differs from that of Scotland to the north, Wales to the west, or Ireland further west across the Irish Sea (see map 1). Because of England’s proximity to Europe and relatively mild terrain, it continued to experience invasions and migrations – by the Romans, by the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes, by the Danes, and by the Norman French. As a result, England developed along a different track from the other lands of the British Isles, for each of these movements brought a new way of organizing society and government, a new language and culture, and, eventually, the assimilation of a new people and their ways.
In particular, precisely because it was repeatedly threatened with invasion, the people of southeastern Britain (i.e., England) experienced increasing centralization. During the Anglo-Saxon period (410–1066 CE), a series of strong kings of the Wessex dynasty (most notably Alfred the Great, 848/9–99, reigned 871–99) established their control over the whole of “Angle-land.” In order to do this, and above all to repel a series of Viking invasions in the ninth and tenth centuries, they had to develop an efficient military and a reliable system of taxation to support it – or to buy off the invaders when they did not choose to fight. Readers of Beowulf know that Anglo-Saxon tribal kings had always relied upon small bands of noblemen (eventually called thegns), associated with their households, for their military force. Alfred, who came to rule not a tribe but a nation, needed a bigger, more national force. Thus, he established an efficient militia or fyrd, made up of the civilian male population serving in rotation, as well as a strong navy. To pay for their supply on campaign, Alfred’s successors developed an efficient land tax, called the heregeld.
Anglo-Saxon kings also created institutions to enhance their control of England in times of peace. Thus, by 1066, they had established a capital at Winchester and divided the country into about 40 counties or shires (see map 2). Each shire had a “shire reeve” or sheriff, who acted on the king’s orders to collect the heregeld or raise the fyrd. He received those orders via royal messages called “writs,” which were sent out by the king’s chancellor and other secretaries, called clerks, working out of an office later called the Chancery. The yield from taxes was sent to the king’s Treasury, known as the Chamber because, at first, the king actually kept this money in his bedchamber. After the Norman Conquest of 1066, William the Conqueror (1066–87) and his successors moved the capital to London, but otherwise embraced this administrative system and improved it. These developments tended to make England a more centralized and unified country, and to make the king’s authority more efficient and secure. Admittedly, that process was still incomplete as this book opens in 1485, for the king’s authority was weak in many frontier areas in the north and west, where powerful nobles held sway.
Still, nothing like this process took place in Scotland, Ireland, Wales (or, for that matter, Cornwall in the remote West). Located farther away from continental Europe, more mountainous or boggy and difficult of access, these regions did not experience large-scale invasions or migrations until much later. Migratory groups might launch periodic attempts at individual settlement, but there was little mass displacement of population, settling down, or intermarriage before about 1150. These lands were therefore not subjected to the cultural clashes and transformations experienced by medieval England. They remained Celtic in culture and, to a great extent, language well into the Middle Ages.
Nor did strong centralized kingship emerge in these countries as in England. Once again, their harsher climates, poorer soils, and rougher topography (craggy, boggy, forested) made agriculture more difficult and worked against the growth of a central court city, large urban administrative centers, nucleated villages, or easy communication. Rather, people lived in isolated settlements, far from each other. This made it difficult for even a strong ruler to gain the cooperation or loyalty of his subjects. During the Middle Ages there arose a king of Scotland, a high-king of Ireland, and a prince of (North) Wales, but most people’s effective loyalty went to their individual tribe or, later, their clan or (in Ireland) their sept. A clan or sept was a political and social unit whose members claimed to be descended from a common ancestor; in practice, many had no blood relationship to each other. Rather, most clansmen were simply the tenants of their chief. Like an extended family, the clan provided sustenance, protection, and a sense of belonging, sometimes over very long distances, in return for loyalty and, especially, military service. This system left no room for a powerful sovereign or overarching “national” institutions. Rather, rival clans often fought long, bloody feuds, sometimes over broad issues such as the Crown of Scotland or the principality of Wales, but more often over local dominance, land, cattle, or women.
As a result, when the medieval English began to move aggressively into the Celtic lands, there was no strong unifying power or national institutions to stop them. Indeed, some clans found it convenient to collaborate with the English Crown, in order to gain a powerful ally in their feuds against rival clans. This disunity and disorganization, combined with English wealth and military efficiency, enabled the English gradually to dominate the whole archipelago – though never easily. For example, it took a century of warfare before King Edward I (1239–1307; reigned 1272–1307) managed to unite the principality of Wales to England by the Statute of Rhuddlan in 1284. In future, there would be a prince of Wales, but he would be the eldest son of the king of England. English criminal law was imposed, though the Welsh were allowed to retain their civil law until the early sixteenth century. The English established government centers at Caernarvon and Carmarthen, divided outlying parts of Wales into shires (see map 2), and filled high government offices with Englishmen. To maintain their authority, late-medieval English kings relied on English settlers who displaced the native population from the fertile valley areas to the rugged uplands, as well as powerful nobles who lived along the Anglo-Welsh border and the south coast. This borderland area was known as the Welsh Marches (a term probably derived from “mark” or boundary) and these nobles came to be known as Marcher Lords. Later, the early Tudors (1485–1547) abolished the Marcher lordships, imposed the full structure of English counties and sheriffs, and, after the Reformation, established a Protestant Church in Wales (see chapter 2). But the Welsh retained their language and many of their cultural traditions. Southern Wales, closest to England, is the most populous and wealthiest part of the country – at the beginning of our period because of its rich farmland, at the end because of its rich coal deposits. Northern Wales is more remote, less populated, less well integrated into the English political and economic system. Today, Wales remains part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and is ruled largely from London. But, since 1998, it has had a separate assembly to decide upon policy and administer some internal affairs.
Scotland resisted absorption by England all through the high medieval (1066–1330), late medieval (1330–1485), and Tudor (1485–1603) periods despite a smaller population, a poorer economy, and a weaker monarchy.3 That monarchy had theoretically united the country toward the beginning of the eleventh century. But it had done so, in part, by seeking English help, won through marriage alliances and the assumption of feudal obligations to the English king. Moreover, the clans, especially in Scotland’s rugged northern Highlands, often paid little attention to their king’s wishes and sometimes allied with the English ruler against him. Disputes over royal marriages, the Scottish king’s subordinate feudal status, and the incursions of aggressive nobles on both sides of the border often led to wider conflict. In 1295 John de Balliol (ca. 1250–1314; reigned 1292–6) renounced his allegiance to Edward I and launched what became a series of wars for control of the northern kingdom. King Edward defeated the Scots at Dunbar in 1296 and crushed another rebellion led by Sir William Wallace (aka “Braveheart”; d. 1305) in 1303, but the struggle was revived by Robert the Bruce (1274–1329; reigned 1306–29). Bruce’s resounding victory over the English at the battle of Bannockburn in 1314 paved the way for the reestablishment of Scottish independence under a Scottish king, recognized by the Treaty of Edinburgh of 1328.
Over the next three centuries the English tried repeatedly to reverse the results of Bannockburn, while the Scots returned the favor by interfering in English politics. As we shall see, the Tudor kings of England, in particular, sought to control Scotland, sometimes through conquest, sometimes through diplomatic marriage (see chapters 1–4). They did so because they were tempted by Scotland’s relative poverty and small population; because they wanted to pacify the 110-mile Anglo- Scottish border; because traitors to the English king could always find refuge with the Scots; and because a hostile Scotland could be used by England’s greatest medieval rival, France, as a base from which to invade England. Franco-Scottish friendship was so longstanding that it became known as the “Auld Alliance.” Finally, in 1603, as we shall see in chapter 5, the Tudor dynasty died out and a distant relative who happened to be already the king of Scotland, James VI (1566–1625; reigned 1567–1625), became king of England as well. There he was known as James I and ruled from 1603 to 1625 (see genealogies 2–3, pp. 430–1). But the enmity between the two countries remained, in part because, though they both embraced Protestantism at the Reformation, they differed vehemently as to proper Church government and liturgy. The two countries continued to be governed by one monarch through separate institutions until the Act of Union of 1707 united England (and Wales) with Scotland in the kingdom of Great Britain. The union was controversial in the eighteenth century and remains so today: many Scots saw its economic benefits, but resented the loss of initiative to London. Scotland remains part of the United Kingdom, but for some years there has been a movement urging devolution (i.e., independent government), and the Scotland Act of 1998 established a separate Scottish executive and a parliament with taxraising powers. Nevertheless, the northern kingdom continues to elect members to the Westminster parliament as well.
In all this history, the relationship of Ireland to England and to Great Britain as a whole is the one that is most complicated and fraught with bitterness and tragedy – with profound consequences for the whole Atlantic world. Briefly, beginning in the Norman period, the population of Celtic or Gaelic Ireland was very gradually colonized and partly subdued by a small minority of English adventurers. Some Irish septs allied with the English newcomers, others opposed them. In any case, these new Anglo-Irish nobles soon became the dominant power in Ireland. Officially, they acknowledged the English king as feudal overlord of all Ireland, but, in practice, there was little to restrain their local control. Though they regarded the native Irish as uncivilized bandits, they gradually took up many of their customs, dress, and even the Gaelic Irish language. As a result, to the English across the Irish Sea, the independent Anglo-Irish looked very Irish; but to the native Irish (Gaelic) population, they were the English oppressors.