It is one of the most well-known incidents in English constitutional history. On December 1, 1641, the increasingly restive House of Commons presented Charles I with the so-called Grand Remonstrance, a list of 206 enumerated grievances, encompassing the entirety of his reign to date.\u27 The King was not amused. On January 3, 1642, he accused five members of the House of Commons and Lord Kimbolton-all leaders of the opposition to the Crown--of treason and sought to have them tried before the House of Lords
The study of fifteenth century English constitutional history covers a period of great political, mi...
The Tudor monarchy (1485-1603), can be understood as the beginning of the early modern era of Englis...
Until recently, King James VI and I suffered from an excessively unforgiving reputation: Sir Anthony...
The English Civil War is one of the seminal events in Anglo-American constitutional history. Oceans ...
Up to the reign of the Tudors and in some respects to the Stuarts, Parliament was controlled by the ...
on the King’s home and foreign policy The pantheon of British queens and kings ranges from glorious ...
In November 1584 Queen Elizabeth I summoned her fifth Parliament. Over twelve years had elapsed sinc...
[8] p.A summary of Parliament's actions against the royalist lords and of the King's answer to Parli...
General rejoicing greeted the Restoration of Charles II to the English throne in 1660; however the t...
This article investigates the intersections of historical memory and political behavior during Engla...
This dissertation examines a series of specific problems affecting England's queens regnant, which a...
Regnant queenship is one of the defining features of the early modern era. During this period Englan...
To understand what drives this female‐led quest for justice we must situate this as a response to th...
"A Most Grievous and Insupportable Vexation":Billeting in Early Seventeenth Century EnglandOne of th...
In 1642, the Long Parliament denounced Queen Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I, for hatching ‘popis...
The study of fifteenth century English constitutional history covers a period of great political, mi...
The Tudor monarchy (1485-1603), can be understood as the beginning of the early modern era of Englis...
Until recently, King James VI and I suffered from an excessively unforgiving reputation: Sir Anthony...
The English Civil War is one of the seminal events in Anglo-American constitutional history. Oceans ...
Up to the reign of the Tudors and in some respects to the Stuarts, Parliament was controlled by the ...
on the King’s home and foreign policy The pantheon of British queens and kings ranges from glorious ...
In November 1584 Queen Elizabeth I summoned her fifth Parliament. Over twelve years had elapsed sinc...
[8] p.A summary of Parliament's actions against the royalist lords and of the King's answer to Parli...
General rejoicing greeted the Restoration of Charles II to the English throne in 1660; however the t...
This article investigates the intersections of historical memory and political behavior during Engla...
This dissertation examines a series of specific problems affecting England's queens regnant, which a...
Regnant queenship is one of the defining features of the early modern era. During this period Englan...
To understand what drives this female‐led quest for justice we must situate this as a response to th...
"A Most Grievous and Insupportable Vexation":Billeting in Early Seventeenth Century EnglandOne of th...
In 1642, the Long Parliament denounced Queen Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I, for hatching ‘popis...
The study of fifteenth century English constitutional history covers a period of great political, mi...
The Tudor monarchy (1485-1603), can be understood as the beginning of the early modern era of Englis...
Until recently, King James VI and I suffered from an excessively unforgiving reputation: Sir Anthony...