Gentry Culture and the Politics of Religion: Cheshire on the Eve of Civil War
By (Author) Richard Cust
By (author) Peter Lake
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
12th June 2020
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
Religion and politics
942.71062
Hardback
392
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 22mm
726g
This book revisits the county study as a way of understanding the dynamics of civil war in England during the 1640s. It explores gentry culture and the extent to which early Stuart Cheshire could be said to be a 'county community'. It also investigates how the county's governing elite and puritan religious establishment responded to highly polarising interventions by the central government and Laudian ecclesiastical authorities during Charles I's Personal Rule. The second half of the book provides a rich and detailed analysis of petitioning movements and side-taking in Cheshire in 1641-2. An important contribution to understanding the local origins and outbreak of civil war in England, the book will be of interest to all students and scholars studying the English revolution. -- .
'It [Gentry Culture and the Politics of Religion] broadens our understanding of the ideology and material culture of the preCivil War gentry, and it shows how, even in counties with long efforts at consensus, tensions'
Journal of British Studies
Richard Cust is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Birmingham
Peter Lake is Distinguished Professor of History at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee