Charles I and his clerical supporters are often said to have been wary of print and public discussion, only entering the public sphere reluctantly and to comparatively little effect during the political crisis of 1642. This article challenges such views by focusing on the neglected role of official forms of print such as proclamations, declarations, and state prayers and their promulgation in the nation’s churches. It traces the ways in which the king utilised the network of parish clergy to broadcast his message and mobilise support during the Scottish crisis of 1639-40 and again in the ‘paper war’ of 1642. The article argues that traditional forms of printed address retained their potency and influence despite the proliferation of polemic...
In much of the historiography surrounding print culture and the book trade, the worldliness of print...
In the last two decades historians have been increasingly interested in the modernization of the mon...
This essay reviews the nature of the private and public spheres as they engage with the pr...
Charles I and his clerical supporters are often said to have been wary of print and public discussio...
Given the scarcity of documentary evidence of royalism among ordinary men and women in Interregnum E...
Developing from the recent surge of interest in the Royalist cause during the Civil Wars, this thesi...
The calculated use of media by those in power is a phenomenon dating back at least to the seventeent...
This article explores the polemical presentation of Oxford, the royalist capital between 1642 and 16...
In the early 1530s, the sermon was a basic tool to teach the new Anglican doctrine to people of all ...
Over a decade after the execution of his father, Charles II of England was invited back to his thron...
In this article I propose that the relatively few intercepted and discovered letters printed during ...
ArticleThe Third Earl of Shaftesbury has been celebrated for his commitment to free public discours...
The principal argument of this thesis is that royalist literary publishing in the civil wars and Int...
PhD ThesisOn the accession of Queen Anne there was no government propaganda machine, and ministeria...
Above all, the republican regime that governed first England, and then the entirety of the British I...
In much of the historiography surrounding print culture and the book trade, the worldliness of print...
In the last two decades historians have been increasingly interested in the modernization of the mon...
This essay reviews the nature of the private and public spheres as they engage with the pr...
Charles I and his clerical supporters are often said to have been wary of print and public discussio...
Given the scarcity of documentary evidence of royalism among ordinary men and women in Interregnum E...
Developing from the recent surge of interest in the Royalist cause during the Civil Wars, this thesi...
The calculated use of media by those in power is a phenomenon dating back at least to the seventeent...
This article explores the polemical presentation of Oxford, the royalist capital between 1642 and 16...
In the early 1530s, the sermon was a basic tool to teach the new Anglican doctrine to people of all ...
Over a decade after the execution of his father, Charles II of England was invited back to his thron...
In this article I propose that the relatively few intercepted and discovered letters printed during ...
ArticleThe Third Earl of Shaftesbury has been celebrated for his commitment to free public discours...
The principal argument of this thesis is that royalist literary publishing in the civil wars and Int...
PhD ThesisOn the accession of Queen Anne there was no government propaganda machine, and ministeria...
Above all, the republican regime that governed first England, and then the entirety of the British I...
In much of the historiography surrounding print culture and the book trade, the worldliness of print...
In the last two decades historians have been increasingly interested in the modernization of the mon...
This essay reviews the nature of the private and public spheres as they engage with the pr...