A freeborn people : politics and the nation in seventeenth-century England

Bibliographic Information

A freeborn people : politics and the nation in seventeenth-century England

David Underdown

Clarendon Press, 1996

Available at  / 22 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A Freeborn People is a provocative exploration of the ways in which the political cultures of the elite and of common people intersected during the seventeenth century. David Underdown shows that the two worlds were not as separate as historians have often thought them to be; English men and women of all social levels had similar expectations about good government and about the traditional liberties available to them under the `Ancient Constitution'. Throughout the century, both levels of politics were also powerfully influenced by prevailing assumptions about gender roles, and, especially in the years before the civil wars, by fears that the country was threatened by evil forces of satanic inversion. This dramatic reinterpretation of the Stuart period, based on the author's acclaimed 1992 Ford Lectures, begins a new chapter in the continuing debate over the historical meaning of Britain's seventeenth-century revolutions.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top