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The Radical Face of the Ancient Constitution: St Edward's 'Laws' in Early Modern Political Thought
Hardback
Main Details
Description
This book deals with the ways in which medieval and early modern historians, lawyers and politicians deployed their own national history to justify opposition to the English kingship. More particularly, it is a study of the origins and development of an historical construct called the 'radical ancient constitution', a version of the past which originated from sources including the so-called 'Laws' of Edward the Confessor. The book tells how a cult of kingship, centred around the Confessor's 'Laws', was transformed from a cult that sacralised the upstart Norman dynasty into one which desecrated the Stuart monarchy. In telling the story of the 'ancient constitution' the author reconfigures the historical landscape of early modern England and demonstrates that the so-called Whig version of history, far from being a concoction of seventeenth-century dissidents, enjoyed the sanction of medieval and early modern historians, scholars and lawyers.
Reviews'Greenberg's book is a very lucid and scholarly account of a subject that is of critical importance in English intellectual, political, and constitutional history. It is the fullest and best discussion of the history of ancient constitutionalism that has yet been produced.' Johann Sommerville, H-Albion 'Greenberg brings to greater prominence a number of authors whose contemporary impact we tend to underestimate ... a fine scholarly study, which traverses the boundary of medieval and early modern studies in a manner which few could emulate.' The English Historical Review '... an informative and provocative book, one of value to advanced students of early modern England.' Choice 'Greenberg has a flair for untangling tricky legal concepts ... and explaining their relevance to political thought ... lucid discussion ...'. Royal Stuart Review
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