Remembering the English Civil Wars Remembering the Medieval and Early Modern Worlds Series
Coordonnateurs : Bowen Lloyd, Stoyle Mark
Remembering the English Civil Wars is the first collection of essays to explore how the bloody struggle which took place between the supporters of king and parliament during the 1640s was viewed in retrospect.
The English Civil Wars were perhaps the most calamitous series of conflicts in the country?s recorded history. Over the past twenty years there has been a surge of interest in the way that the Civil Wars were remembered by the men, women and children who were unfortunate enough to live through them. The essays brought together in this book not only provide a clear and accessible introduction to this fast-developing field of study but also bring together the voices of a diverse group of scholars who are working at its cutting edge. Through the investigation of a broad, but closely interrelated, range of topics ? including elite, popular, urban and local memories of the wars, as well as the relationships between civil war memory and ceremony, material culture and concepts of space and place ? the essays contained in this volume demonstrate, with exceptional vividness and clarity, how the people of England and Wales continued to be haunted by the ghosts of the mid-century conflict throughout the decades which followed.
The book will be essential reading for all students of the English Civil Wars, Stuart Britain and the history of memory.
Introduction: Remembering the English Civil Wars 1 Civilian Memories of the British Civil Wars, 1642-1660 2 ‘When the Scotts Army did March Thorow our County’: Space, Place and Remembering in the English Civil War 3 History, Politics and Power: Shaping the Recent Past in Civil War Pembrokeshire 4 ‘Extreme Trials of Fidelity’?: Captain Bartholomew Gidley and Royalist Memories of the English Civil War 5 ‘All Forms Accustomed’: Ritual, Precedent and the Past at the Coronation of Charles II 6 The Farnley Wood Plot and the Memory of the Civil Wars in Yorkshire 7 From Revolutionary Bulwark to Loyalist Bastion: The Restoration Refashioning of the London Artillery Company, 1660-85 8 ‘Memories of the Maimed’: The Testimony of Charles I’s Former Soldiers, 1660–1730
Lloyd Bowen is Senior Lecturer in Early Modern and Welsh History at Cardiff University, UK. His previous publications include The politics of the principality: Wales, c.1603-1642 (2007) and Family and society in early Stuart Glamorgan: the household accounts of Sir Thomas Aubrey of Llantrithyd, c.1565-1641 (2006).
Mark Stoyle is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Southampton, UK. His previous publications include The black legend of Prince Rupert's dog: witchcraft and propaganda during the English civil war (2011) and Soldiers and strangers: an ethnic history of the English Civil War (2005).
Date de parution : 10-2021
15.6x23.4 cm
Date de parution : 10-2021
15.6x23.4 cm
Thème de Remembering the English Civil Wars :
Mots-clés :
Charles I; memory; Civil Wars; British Civil War; Charles II’s Coronation; English Civil War; Marston Moor; Oliver Cromwell; Artillery Company; Gloucester; Parlimentarian; Parliamentarian War Effort; Royalist; Civilian Petitioners; Duke of Buckingham; Clothing Districts; Puritan; Charles II; Presbyterian; England; Wales; Wood Men; Scotland; West Riding; Ireland; Honourable Artillery Company; Soldiers; Duke Of York; Montagu; Protectorate; Post-war; Richard Cromwell; Rowland Laugharne; Thomas Fairfax; Trained Bands; gender; Northern Risings; religion; Royalist Soldiers; Civil War; Cheshire Quarter Sessions; remembering; Adwalton Moor; Coronation Oath