'William Cecil and the British succession crisis of the 1560s' reconsiders the nature of the early Elizabethan polity and Cecil's place in it. Conventional historiography maintains that as principal secretary Cecil was a moderate, cautious, and religiously neutral politician, content to follow Elizabeth I's direction in policy. More recently, Professors Patrick Collinson and John Guy have challenged this interpretation of the Elizabethan polity. Based on a thorough survey of the archives, my thesis explores Cecil's political creed in the 1560s. Three years of research have helped to paint a radically different picture of Cecil to the one traditionally represented: he was a councillor prepared to redefine his relationship with a monarch who ...
The Tudor dynasty of Early Modern England has long-fascinated historians. They collectively represen...
This study seeks to examine the way in which contemporaries of James VI defended his right to the En...
sketches of British radicals in the seventeenth cen-tury, and beginning a study of the colonial orig...
Bois Jean-Pierre. Stephen Alford, The Early Elizabethan Polity : William Cecil and the British Succe...
While most historians argue William Cecil’s ultimate aim was either to build a Protestant England or...
The thesis examines the Cecils contribution to three areas of religious policy during 1588-98: the c...
Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, (15637-1612) was the second son and political heir of Lord Burghley...
This PhD dissertation is a biographical study of the life and political career of the second earl of...
This article offers a new perspective on the context and significance of the 1553 succession crisis ...
This thesis centres on a pivotal event in the development of religious antagonism in England - the p...
This article investigates the intersections of historical memory and political behavior during Engla...
This thesis examines political prophecy in England during the reign of Elizabeth I (1558-1603). The ...
Part of a special section on the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England. The writer examines the clos...
England after Henry VIII death went through cardinal changes under the Tudors. Though Henry VIII sel...
This thesis explores the ascendancy in Warwickshire of the Dudley earls of Warwick and Robert Dudley...
The Tudor dynasty of Early Modern England has long-fascinated historians. They collectively represen...
This study seeks to examine the way in which contemporaries of James VI defended his right to the En...
sketches of British radicals in the seventeenth cen-tury, and beginning a study of the colonial orig...
Bois Jean-Pierre. Stephen Alford, The Early Elizabethan Polity : William Cecil and the British Succe...
While most historians argue William Cecil’s ultimate aim was either to build a Protestant England or...
The thesis examines the Cecils contribution to three areas of religious policy during 1588-98: the c...
Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, (15637-1612) was the second son and political heir of Lord Burghley...
This PhD dissertation is a biographical study of the life and political career of the second earl of...
This article offers a new perspective on the context and significance of the 1553 succession crisis ...
This thesis centres on a pivotal event in the development of religious antagonism in England - the p...
This article investigates the intersections of historical memory and political behavior during Engla...
This thesis examines political prophecy in England during the reign of Elizabeth I (1558-1603). The ...
Part of a special section on the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England. The writer examines the clos...
England after Henry VIII death went through cardinal changes under the Tudors. Though Henry VIII sel...
This thesis explores the ascendancy in Warwickshire of the Dudley earls of Warwick and Robert Dudley...
The Tudor dynasty of Early Modern England has long-fascinated historians. They collectively represen...
This study seeks to examine the way in which contemporaries of James VI defended his right to the En...
sketches of British radicals in the seventeenth cen-tury, and beginning a study of the colonial orig...