Parliaments Princes during the Civil Wars: The guardianship of Charles Is younger children
By (Author) Dr. Lucy Underwood
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
5th March 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
European history: Reformation
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book explores how Parliament managed the upbringing of King Charles Is two youngest children Henry, Duke of Gloucester (1640-1660) and Princess Elizabeth (1635-1650) during the course and aftermath of the English Civil War. It presents their household, their education and their religious formation as extensions of Parliamentarian political agenda to control the monarchy, and examines portrayals and perceptions of the junior princes, especially Elizabeth, from different political factions during the war and post-war peace negotiations.
Spanning from the beginning of their custody at the outbreak of civil war in 1642, and including the two years of James, Duke of Yorks imprisonment, this book charts their political significance to the fledgling Commonwealth up until Henry of Gloucesters departure in 1653. Exploring the impact of the regicide on the childrens usefulness to the new republic, as well as how their experience and agency effected the adult agendas around them, Underwood shows how upbringing was key to parliaments interest in the princes as their political usefulness depended on the kind of adults they would become. This study is a history both of childhood and of the politics of childhood in Englands turbulent Seventeenth Century.
Lucy Underwood is an honorary research fellow at the University of Warwick, UK. She has held research fellowships at the British School at Rome, Folger Shakespeare Library, and Beinecke Library, Yale University. She is the author of Childhood, youth and religious dissent in post-Reformation England (2014) and the co-editor of Childhood, youth and religious minorities in early modern Europe (2019).