Early modern parliamentary diaries are a standard source for historians, and have long been used as a supplement to the official journals in reconstructions of debates and business at Westminster. This article adopts a contrasting approach and examines what diaries – viewed as sources in their own right – reveal about parliament and its members, methods of contemporary note‐taking, and the circulation and readership of political information. It begins with a review of the evidence for why, how, and to what ends members kept parliamentary diaries, before exploring the extent of their dissemination in early Stuart England. While recent literature has emphasized the circulation of materials relating to Jacobean and especially Caroline parliame...
This thesis examines the 'Long Parliament' of 1406 as an example of politics and legislation in Eng...
This article discusses the Five Knights\u27 Case of 1628 and also the more general ideas that were d...
The State Papers were the principal executive instruments of the early modern English state. By 1610...
This article explores the problem of recovering early modern utterances by focusing upon the issue o...
In the 19th and 20th centuries, scholarship on the Scottish parliament was heavily informed by a nar...
The English Civil War is one of the seminal events in Anglo-American constitutional history. Oceans ...
This article examines the growth of interest in diary keeping in twentieth-century Britain. It explo...
This article is part of my reassessment of the theoretical importance of Holinshed\u27s Chronicles...
Although John Towill Rutt's 1828 edition of the Diary of Thomas Burton remains a key source for the ...
This thesis considers the English parliamentary privilege of freedom from arrest (and other legal pr...
This article for the first time correctly identifies a manuscript previously identified as an ‘offic...
This dissertation examines the question about whether the growth of Parliamentary stature and rise o...
Historians of the Scottish parliament have paid little attention to shire elections because of an ap...
This article examines neglected evidence regarding the ongoing captivity of the children of Charles ...
Over the course of the early modern period, a remarkable number of people below the ranks of the gen...
This thesis examines the 'Long Parliament' of 1406 as an example of politics and legislation in Eng...
This article discusses the Five Knights\u27 Case of 1628 and also the more general ideas that were d...
The State Papers were the principal executive instruments of the early modern English state. By 1610...
This article explores the problem of recovering early modern utterances by focusing upon the issue o...
In the 19th and 20th centuries, scholarship on the Scottish parliament was heavily informed by a nar...
The English Civil War is one of the seminal events in Anglo-American constitutional history. Oceans ...
This article examines the growth of interest in diary keeping in twentieth-century Britain. It explo...
This article is part of my reassessment of the theoretical importance of Holinshed\u27s Chronicles...
Although John Towill Rutt's 1828 edition of the Diary of Thomas Burton remains a key source for the ...
This thesis considers the English parliamentary privilege of freedom from arrest (and other legal pr...
This article for the first time correctly identifies a manuscript previously identified as an ‘offic...
This dissertation examines the question about whether the growth of Parliamentary stature and rise o...
Historians of the Scottish parliament have paid little attention to shire elections because of an ap...
This article examines neglected evidence regarding the ongoing captivity of the children of Charles ...
Over the course of the early modern period, a remarkable number of people below the ranks of the gen...
This thesis examines the 'Long Parliament' of 1406 as an example of politics and legislation in Eng...
This article discusses the Five Knights\u27 Case of 1628 and also the more general ideas that were d...
The State Papers were the principal executive instruments of the early modern English state. By 1610...