Subjects and sovereigns : the grand controversy over legal sovereignty in Stuart England
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Subjects and sovereigns : the grand controversy over legal sovereignty in Stuart England
Cambridge University Press, 1981
Available at 23 libraries
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Note
Bibliography: p. [379]-410
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Concerned in a general way with theories of legitimacy, this book describes a transformation in English political thought between the opening of the civil war in 1642 and the Bill of Rights in 1689. When it was complete, the political nation as a whole had accepted the modern idea of parliamentary or legal sovereignty. The authors argue that a conservative theory of order, which assigned the king a lofty and unrivalled position, gave way in these years to a more radical community-centered view of government by which the king shared law-making on equal terms with the House of Lords and the House of Commons. Although the community-centered ideology may appear unexceptional to the modern observer, it constituted a revolutionary departure from the prevailing order theory of kingship and political society that had characterized political thought in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. The shift in political thought
- 2. The keeper of the kingdom
- 3. The new age of political definition
- 4. That 'Poisonous Tenet' of co-ordination
- 5. The curious case of William Prynne
- 6. The idiom of restoration politics
- 7. Co-ordination and coevality in exclusion literature
- 8. The law-makers and the dispensing power
- Appendix
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.
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