This paper highlights the importance of endogenous changes in the foundations of legitimacy for political regimes. It focuses on the central role of legitimacy changes in the rise of constitutional monarchy in England. It first defines legitimacy and briefly elaborates a theoretical framework enabling a historical study of this unobservable variable. It proceeds to substantiate that the low-legitimacy, post-Reformation Tudor monarchs of the 16th century promoted Parliament to enhance their legitimacy, thereby changing the legislative process from the “Crown and Parliament” to the “Crown in Parliament” that still prevails in England
This thesis is about how and why Restoration-period political culture changed in England in the run ...
This thesis examines the political and social responses of the Anglo-Norman aristocracy between 1087...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from CUP via the DOI in this ...
This paper highlights the importance of endogenous changes in the foundations of legitimacy for poli...
This thesis is a work of constitutional theory focusing on the Bill of Rights [1688]. It posits this...
Political legitimacy has long been recognized in the social sciences as an integral component of gov...
Up to the reign of the Tudors and in some respects to the Stuarts, Parliament was controlled by the ...
How is it possible to account for the continuing presence of monarchy in advanced social democracies...
The Crown holds the conceptual place held by the State in those legal systems derived from or influe...
Staging Power in Tudor and Stuart English History Plays examines the changing ideological conception...
In fifteenth century England, there were significant changes to the way kingship operated and was vi...
In the aftermath of the Stamp Act, prominent American thinkers of otherwise unquestioned Whiggish af...
Economic historians conventionally date the origins of the English fiscal state to the foundation of...
The century in which Richelieu and Louis XIV fashioned an absolute dynastic state in France is notew...
What is the nature and source of prerogative power? Where does it come from and how was it created? ...
This thesis is about how and why Restoration-period political culture changed in England in the run ...
This thesis examines the political and social responses of the Anglo-Norman aristocracy between 1087...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from CUP via the DOI in this ...
This paper highlights the importance of endogenous changes in the foundations of legitimacy for poli...
This thesis is a work of constitutional theory focusing on the Bill of Rights [1688]. It posits this...
Political legitimacy has long been recognized in the social sciences as an integral component of gov...
Up to the reign of the Tudors and in some respects to the Stuarts, Parliament was controlled by the ...
How is it possible to account for the continuing presence of monarchy in advanced social democracies...
The Crown holds the conceptual place held by the State in those legal systems derived from or influe...
Staging Power in Tudor and Stuart English History Plays examines the changing ideological conception...
In fifteenth century England, there were significant changes to the way kingship operated and was vi...
In the aftermath of the Stamp Act, prominent American thinkers of otherwise unquestioned Whiggish af...
Economic historians conventionally date the origins of the English fiscal state to the foundation of...
The century in which Richelieu and Louis XIV fashioned an absolute dynastic state in France is notew...
What is the nature and source of prerogative power? Where does it come from and how was it created? ...
This thesis is about how and why Restoration-period political culture changed in England in the run ...
This thesis examines the political and social responses of the Anglo-Norman aristocracy between 1087...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from CUP via the DOI in this ...