Journal Article10.1080/0268117x.2023.2221660
Governors, the Royalist war effort, and power’s personalisation in Northern England, 1642–9
TL;DR: In this paper , the devolution of power to garrison governors allowed the Royalists to subordinate the antebellum institutions of Northern England's civil administration to the material and security needs of the Royalist army.
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Abstract: Royalist administration during the British Civil Wars of the mid-seventeenth century has been understudied, a consequence both of the historic destruction of primary sources and due to a longstanding bias against investigation into Royalism by historians. However, extant sources, such as civic corporations’ records, have survived in regional archives to reconstruct Royalist military government through its interaction with civil authorities. The devolution of power to garrison governors allowed the Royalists to subordinate the antebellum institutions of Northern England’s civil administration to the material and security needs of the Royalist army. This article’s historiographical purpose is to contribute towards the long-standing debate on Royalist governance. While often typified by historians as opaque, disorganised, and exploitative, Royalist administration in Northern England displayed remarkable mutability—being capable of significant change in reaction to changing military or political circumstances.
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References
The Baronial Context of the English Civil War
TL;DR: The Civill Warres of England as mentioned in this paper, a survey of the baronial struggles in England from Richard II to Henry VII, was shortly to be endowed with a profoundly ironic topicality.
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Royalists and royalism during the English civil wars
Jason McElligott,David L. Smith +1 more
- 01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: McElligott and Smith as mentioned in this paper discuss the relationship between the Cavalier ideal and the reality of the Royalist party, and present a re-thinking of the two sides.
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War in England, 1642-1649
Barbara Donagan
- 01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: The Texture of War: the Soldier's World 4. Slay in Love: the Moral and Judicial Economy of the Civil War 5. The Protagonists 6. Case Histories: Two Sieges 7. Conclusion
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The Royalist War Effort
Ronald Hutton
- 01 Jan 1982
TL;DR: In this article, a husbandman at Marston Moor, who was ploughing his fields when the rival armies drew up there to fight the biggest battle of the war, replied to hearing that the conflict was produced by a quarrel between King and Parliament he replied ‘What, has they two fallen out again?’ It is time that this engaging character vanished from the pages of history.
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