Kingship and crown finance under James VI and I, 1603-1625

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Kingship and crown finance under James VI and I, 1603-1625

John Cramsie

(Royal Historical Society studies in history new series)

Royal Historical Society , Boydell Press, 2002

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注記

Bibliography: p. 219-235

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

How James deployed crown finance provides fundamental insights into his personal rule. This book rejects outright the stereotypical image of James VI and I as mindlessly extravagant and integrates crown finance with James's kingship. It offers both a fresh view of crown finance - one of the blackest elements in James's historical reputation - and a reconstruction of how the king who wrote on divine right monarchy operated his kingship in practice. Drawing on both his humanist education, particularly his reading of Xenophon's Cyropaedia, and his kingship in Scotland, James developed a clear, considered agenda for crown finance. He used it consciously to underwrite his novel position as the first king of "Great Britain" and to consolidate the Stuart dynastyoutside of Scotland. This study analyses in detail how James fashioned and refashioned political regimes in England to further this agenda between 1603-25. JOHN CRAMSIE is Assistant Professor of British and Irish Historyat Union College, Schenectady, New York.

目次

  • Acknowledgments
  • Note on sources
  • Abbreviations
  • Introduction: the politics of crown finance in England
  • 1. Jacobean crown finance
  • 2. Kingship and the making of fiscal policy
  • 3. Crown finance and the new regime, 1603-1608
  • 4. The refoundation of the monarchy, 1609-1610
  • 5. The failure of Jacobean kingship, 1611-1617
  • 6. Crown finance and the renewal of Jacobean kingship, 1617-1621
  • 7. The incomplete reformation of finance and politics, 1621-1624
  • Conclusion: the failure of kingship and governance
  • Bibliography
  • Index

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