Synopses & Reviews
This is a major survey of how towns were governed in late Stuart and early Hanoverian England. England's civil wars in the 1640s broke apart a society that had been used to political consensus. Though all sought unity after the wars ended, a new kind of politics developed--one based on partisan division, arising first in urban communities, not at Parliament. This book explains how war unleashed a long cycle of purge and counter-purge and how society found the means to absorb divisive politics peacefully. Legal changes are explored with reference to the rarely-studied court records of King's Bench, to which local competitors turned for help in resolving their differences.
Synopsis
An account of the emergence of local partisan politics in the century after the English Civil War.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 362-382) and index.
Table of Contents
Preface; List of abbreviations; Part I. Corporate Ideal and Partisan Reality: 1. The paradox of partisan politics; 2. 'The best of politics'; 3. From purge to purge: Civil War, Interregnum, and Restoration in the corporations; 4. Partisan politics, 1663-1682; Part II. The King and his Corporations, 1660-1688: 5. The corporations and their charters, 1660-1682; 6. Quo warranto and the King's corporations, 1682-1685; 7. Revolution in the corporations, 1685-1688; Part III. Partisan Conflict and the Law in a Dynamic Society: 8. The legacy of the 1680s; 9. Partisan conflict and political stability, 1702-1727; 10. 1660, 1688, 1727, and beyond; Select bibliography; Index.