An alternative history of britain the civil war extract

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An Alternative History of Britain The Civil War_Layout 1 28/11/2014 14:57 Page 1

Chapter One

Countdown to War: December 1641 to Spring 1642

Forcing a confrontation in the New Year – who was most to blame? Did the ‘Junto’ deliberately try to panic Charles into over-reacting? he main work of the early months of the ‘Long Parliament’ from November 1640 had been the demolition of Charles I’s prerogative powers and ability to raise money without resort to a Parliament, plus the prosecution of his most ‘dangerous’ ministers Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford (Lord Lieutenant of Ireland) and Archbishop William Laud. These measures were generally non-controversial among the majority of ‘opposition’ MPs determined to enforce reform on the King, led by John Pym, plus the ‘opposition’ peers led by the Earl of Warwick and his allies the Earls of Essex (future Parliamentarian Army commander) and Bedford. Notably, the elections to the Parliament – the second one in a year, so the regime was not ‘rusty’ regarding getting the local office-holders (Lord and Deputy Lords Lieutenant) to organize candidates where possible – had seen very few backers of the King’s recent policies elected, and some who were evicted from the Commons ‘on appeal’ by the latter’s elections committee. The initiative thus passed to the ‘opposition’ as the Commons set to work – and one overlooked ‘what if ’ question is the potential for Charles making more of an effort to rally support, possible if a determined organizer (e.g. Strafford, absent in Ireland) had been called upon. As opponents of the ‘Arminian’ forms of ceremonial and doctrine (seen as ‘popish’, semiCatholic, by mainstream Calvinist Protestants) and rigid centralist discipline enforced on the Anglican Church by Laud’s faction, the ‘opposition’ also wanted reform of the Church. But the form that should take was less easy to agree – indicting Laud and returning the Church to ‘purer’ Elizabethan practices free of a supposedly Catholic taint was accompanied in the minds of hard-line Calvinist zealots by a need for ‘Root and Branch’ reform that might even involve abolishing the bishops and replacing them with control by the ‘grass roots’ boards of local ‘presbyters’ that existed in some Calvinist

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An alternative history of britain the civil war extract by Pen and Sword Books Ltd - Issuu