When Queen
Elizabeth I died with no heir in 1603, James VI of Scotland
became King of England. It was the beginning of the Stuart Dynasty.
James
I Stuart 1603-1625
- James
was the son of Mary Stuart who had been condemned to death by Elizabeth I
in 1587
- As
James the VI of Scotland he united the two kingdoms of England and
Scotland under one crown with the name of James I
- He
was a protestant, unlike his mother
- Like
the Tudors, he worked with a small council of ministers
- He
only summoned Parliament to ask for money
- He
surrounded himself with Scottish favourites and his court was
disreputable, corrupt
- That caused a pessimistic view of human nature we can recognize in the works of two famous playwrights of the time, Ben Jonson and William Shakespeare (especially in his last works: Henry VIII , Othello, Macbeth, The Tempest)
Catholics and Puritans disapproved King James: Catholics were fined if they did not attend the Church of England. Puritans, instead, had a high sense of duty and morality, they were against any form of entertainment and preferred a direct contact with God (no rituals). Their motto was "hard work and prayer".
- Catholics tried to get rid of king James with the so-called "Gunpowder Plot" (1605) . Guy Fawkes, the leader of the Catholics, was caught and executed. (National English Festival : Guy Fawkes' Night, every year on 5th of November)
- James I made peace with England's historical
enemy, Spain, because wars were expensive and he did not want to depend on
Parliament (asking them for money)
- England's power declined because the King neglected
the navy and was not interested in foreign policy
- Thanks to peace with Spain the English could lay foundations of their colonial possessions in North America ( the Pilgrim Fathers landed in what is now Massachussetts and founded New Plymouth - 1620)
CHARLES I AND THE CLASH WITH
PARLIAMENT
(1625 -1642)
- Charles
I succeded his father, James I
- He
had strong contrasts with the Puritan party: they were greatly
influential in Parliament and wanted a true balance of power
between the king and Parliament
- Charles
firmly believed he was King by divine right
- Parliament
refused to pay him large amount of money for his home and foreign policy
(costly failures were his wars against Spain and his expeditions to
France)
- 1628
- Parliament brought out the Petition of Rights to limit the power of the
king
- 1629
- the king dissolved Parliament and ruled without for 11 years
- 1640
- Charles I summoned Parliament again to ask for money (to subdue a
religious rebellion in Scotland)
- 1642
- Parliament asked Charles I to give up the command of the armed forces,
he refused, the Civil War broke out.
- The two sides in the war were the Parlamentarians or Puritans - also called Roundheads, because they shaved their heads - who opposed the king and his rule, and the Royalists or Cavaliers, who supported the monarch, instead. The Parlamentarians were financed and supported by the rich middle classes (merchants and bankers, especially) while the Royalists were aristocrats who didn't want to lose their privileges, who were supported the Anglican Church.
Oliver Cromwell and the Puritan
Commonwealth
- Charles
I was made prisoner
- Oliver Cromwell took control of London
and expelled or arrested more than 100 members of Parliament (Royalists)
- Charles
I was executed on 30th January 1649
- Monarchy
was abolished and the country was ruled as a republic called Commonwealth
- 1653
- Oliver Cromwell was appointed Lord Protector of England, Scotland and
Ireland
- After
his death, his son Richard, proved unable to control the army commanders
who had started to fight among themselves
- 1660
- Parliament invited Charles II, Charles I 's son, to return to his
kingdom from his exile in France
Literature in the Puritan Age:
Andrew
Marvell
John Milton - Paradise Lost
“... No man is an island, entire of itself; every
man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main;...Any man’s death diminishes
me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom
the bell tolls; it tolls for thee”. (J. Donne, from Devotions upon
emergent Occasions)
CHARLES II AND THE
RESTORATION OF THE MONARCHY
Charles II Stuart (1660 - 1685)
- The
"merry monarch", witty, pleasure-loving, with French tastes and
sympathies, reigned for 25 years supported by a royalist Parliament who
passed a vindicative legislation against the Puritans
- Two
great catastrophes occurred in that period and Puritans considered
them as God's punishment for the king's immorality (Charles II's court was
considered the most immoral in English history): 1665 bubonic
plague killed more than 100,000 people; 1666 Great Fire of
London destroyed most of the city centre.
- In
order to control the king's interest in the Catholic Church and to reduce
the power of the monarchy, the first political parties in Britain were
founded: the Whigs - descendants of the Parlamentarians (Civil
war 1642 - 1649) , they did not believe in absolute power and were for
religious tolerance; the Tories - descendants of the Royalists,
they supported the Crown, the Church of England and land gentry, they
believed that kings ruled by divine right.
Restoration
Drama - William Congreve
Charles II
brought the French taste for Drama to England and allowed women to perform on
stage for the first time.
____________________________________________________________________
JAMES II AND THE BLOODLESS REVOLUTION
(1685 - 1688)
- James II succeded his brother, Charles
II. Although he was a Catholic, he was supported by the Tories at first
- Foolishly
he decided to impose Catholicism on his kingdom, so he lost even the support of
the Tory party.
- He
had two daughters from his first wife, Mary and Ann, who were
Protestants but the crown would be inherited by Charles Edward, the son he
had had by his catholic wife, Mary of Modena. Both Whigs and Tories did
not want a line of catholic monarchs
- They
asked the Dutch William of Orange, James's nephew and Mary's
husband, to move to London in 1688
- William
and his army entered London without firing a single shot, it was called
the Glorious or Bloodless Revolution
- Parliament
offered the crown jointly to William and his wife Mary, they became
William III and Mary II
- The
power of Parliament over the monarchs was established by the Bill of
Rights in 1689
- The
Toleration Act was passed: dissenters were not persecuted and Catholics,
though not mentioned in the act, were not persecuted either. The Settlement Act was also passed by King William III, it established that Britain would never have a Catholic monarch.
- William
and Mary died with no heir so Mary's sister, James II's second daughter,
became Queen Anne (1702 -1714)
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