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Perceptions of a Monarchy without a King

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How Britain's religious and political powers reacted to an absolute leader without royal blood.
  • 25 February 2013
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Oliver Cromwell had not a drop of royal blood in him. Yet in 1657, prompted by the political chaos that followed the execution of Charles I and inspired by a belief that a return to monarchy was the only way to stabilize the nation, parliament offered Cromwell the crown of Britain. In Perceptions of a Monarchy without a King, Benjamin Woodford explores how factions both inside and outside of government reacted to this unprecedented event.

Moving away from a biographical focus on Cromwell, Woodford looks to the print culture of the period to examine kingship and the Cromwellian regime as a complex phenomenon that elicited diverse reactions - from broadly in favour to dead-set against. Woodford analyzes Cromwell's speeches along with propaganda, newspapers, poetry, republican writings, and the works of religious sects. The fact that many of these writings were produced by men and women who were not members of the government demonstrates that both politicians and the general public were interested in the topics of Cromwell and kingship.

Cromwell's military and political power rendered him a candidate for kingship, but even with his record of achievement, the offer of the crown to a non-nobleman was controversial. Perceptions of a Monarchy without a King reveals the entire nation's responses to the kingship debates while simultaneously illustrating the persistence of the monarchy in the 1650s.

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Price: $55.00
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date: 25 February 2013
ISBN: 9780773588127
Format: eBook
BISACs: HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / General
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“Woodford’s aim is to show the sheer range of opinions the [kingship] controversy generated. In that he fully succeeds.” University of Toronto Quarterly
Benjamin Woodford is a SSHRC postdoctoral fellow at Queen's University.