Few sources have survived relating to the borough of Sunderland in the seventeenth century. However, during the Civil Wars Sunderland was noticed for its support of Parliament and the Scottish Covenanters. A Puritan elite, led by George Lilburne, had established Sunderland as a radical borough by the 1630s. Good relations between Sunderland and the Covenanting Scots began in 1639 and continued throughout the Bishops’ Wars (1639–41) and the first British Civil Wars (1642–46). This was unusual in the North East of England as most of County Durham, Northumberland and Newcastle upon Tyne would remain loyal to King Charles I. A trade blockade of Newcastle, Sunderland and Blyth during 1643–44 was quickly lifted at Sunderland after the Scots garri...
On 23 July 1637, riots broke out in Edinburgh. These disturbances triggered the collapse of royal au...
This is an analysis of the loyalties and political rivalries of the army of David II of Scotland at ...
The wide-ranging interests of the Scandinavians who controlled Dublin from 851, known as the dubh ga...
For centuries the Anglo-Scottish borderlands were a region of weak government, endemic violence, bor...
The rebellion against Charles I's authority that began in Edinburgh in 1637 involved the Scots in su...
At the Battle of Towton in 1461 the Lancastrian forces of Henry VI were defeated by the Yorkist forc...
The article concentrates on the international, and particularly British, dimension of the collective...
A military defeat for the parliamentarians in south Staffordshire in March 1644 involved the capitul...
In 1649 a radical faction of Covenanters seized power in Scotland. Upheld by supporters as the zenit...
This thesis examines the community of water related tradesmen who worked in Newcastle upon Tyne and ...
The English border town of Berwick-upon-Tweed provides the perfect case study to analyze early moder...
This thesis provides a full academic biography of the three northern major-generals appointed by gov...
This thesis investigates how Covenanting in Scotland was understood at local and grassroots level fr...
The English border town of Berwick-upon-Tweed provides the perfect case study to analyze early moder...
The year 1558 was one of open war between England and Scotland. Previous scholarly accounts of this ...
On 23 July 1637, riots broke out in Edinburgh. These disturbances triggered the collapse of royal au...
This is an analysis of the loyalties and political rivalries of the army of David II of Scotland at ...
The wide-ranging interests of the Scandinavians who controlled Dublin from 851, known as the dubh ga...
For centuries the Anglo-Scottish borderlands were a region of weak government, endemic violence, bor...
The rebellion against Charles I's authority that began in Edinburgh in 1637 involved the Scots in su...
At the Battle of Towton in 1461 the Lancastrian forces of Henry VI were defeated by the Yorkist forc...
The article concentrates on the international, and particularly British, dimension of the collective...
A military defeat for the parliamentarians in south Staffordshire in March 1644 involved the capitul...
In 1649 a radical faction of Covenanters seized power in Scotland. Upheld by supporters as the zenit...
This thesis examines the community of water related tradesmen who worked in Newcastle upon Tyne and ...
The English border town of Berwick-upon-Tweed provides the perfect case study to analyze early moder...
This thesis provides a full academic biography of the three northern major-generals appointed by gov...
This thesis investigates how Covenanting in Scotland was understood at local and grassroots level fr...
The English border town of Berwick-upon-Tweed provides the perfect case study to analyze early moder...
The year 1558 was one of open war between England and Scotland. Previous scholarly accounts of this ...
On 23 July 1637, riots broke out in Edinburgh. These disturbances triggered the collapse of royal au...
This is an analysis of the loyalties and political rivalries of the army of David II of Scotland at ...
The wide-ranging interests of the Scandinavians who controlled Dublin from 851, known as the dubh ga...