List of Plates ix
List of Maps xi
Preface xii
List of Abbreviations xv
Genealogical Tables xvi
1 1603 Union of the Crown 1
2 Great Britain’s Solomon 29
3 The Ascendency of Buckingham 51
4 The Personal Rule of Charles I 77
5 The Collapse of Multiple Monarchies 105
6 War in Three Kingdoms 131
7 The British Republic 165
8 The Restoration of the British Monarchies 197
9 Court and Country 221
10 Exclusion and Reaction 254
11 A Glorious Revolution? 267
12 Britain Under William and Anne 299
13 1707 Union of the Kingdoms 329
Notes 349
Bibliographical Essay 359
Appendix 1: Glossary 382
Appendix 2: Archbishops of Canterbury, 1603-1707 392
Appendix 3: Lord Chancellors and Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England, 1603-1707 393
Appendix 4: Lord Treasurers of England, 1603-1707 395
Appendix 5: Principal Secretaries of State of England, 1603-1707 397
Appendix 6: Chief Governors of Ireland, 1603-1707 402
Appendix 7: Scottish Secretaries, 1603-1707 405
Appendix 8 (A): English Parliamentary Sessions, 1604-1707 407
Appendix 8 (B): Irish Parliamentary Sessions, 1613-1713 410
Appendix 8 (C): Scottish Parliamentary Sessions, 1604-1707 407
Appendix 9 (A): The Population of England and Wales, 1601-1706 415
Appendix 9 (B): The Population of Ireland, 1603-1712 416
Appendix 9 (C): The Population of Scotland, 1603-1707 417
Appendix 10: Prices in England, 1601-1700 418
Appendix 11: Wage-rates in England, 1580-1710 419
Index 420
David L. Smith has been a Fellow of Selwyn College, Cambridge since 1988. He was a Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago in 1991, the year in which he won the Royal Historical Society's Alexander Prize. His previous books include Constitutional Royalism and the Search for Settlement, c. 1640-1649 (1994), and edited with R. Strier and D. Bevington, The Theatrical City: Culture, Theatre and Politics in London 1576-1649 (1995).
"Dr Nicholls has proved to be a resourceful choice ... he delivers an accurate, sensitive and engaging account, never allowing the reader to be lost in the quagmires of scholarly debate." The Historical Association
Ask a Question About this Product More... |