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Martial Power and Elizabethan Political Culture: Military Men in England and Ireland, 1558–1594 (Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History)

Martial Power and Elizabethan Political Culture: Military Men in England and Ireland, 1558–1594 (Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History)

  • £85.99


Rory Rapple
Cambridge University Press, 1/8/2009
EAN 9780521843539, ISBN10: 0521843537

Hardcover, 350 pages, 22.9 x 15.5 x 2.3 cm
Language: English

This book studies the careers and political thinking of English martial men, left deeply frustrated as Elizabeth I's quietist foreign policy destroyed the ambitions that the wars of the mid-sixteenth century had excited in them. Until the mid 1580s, unemployment, official disparagement and downward mobility became grim facts of life for many military captains. Rory Rapple examines the experiences and attitudes of this generation of officers and points to a previously overlooked literature of complaint that offered a stinging critique of the monarch and the administration of Sir William Cecil. He also argues that the captains' actions in Ireland, their treatment of its inhabitants and their conceptualisation of both relied on assumptions, attitudes and political thinking which resulted more from their frustration with the status quo in England than any tendency to 'other' the Irish. This book will be required reading for scholars of early modern British and Irish history.

Introduction
1. Chimneys in summer
2. Military men and their discontents
3. The limits of allegiance
English military men, Europe and the Elizabethan regime
4. The captains and the Irish context
5. The limits of imperium
military men and government
6. The limits of rhetoric
the captains and violence in Elizabethan Ireland to 1588
7. Unlimited indemnity
delegates versus viceroys
Conclusion.

'The book is fluently written and persuasive and Rapple’s research is impressively deep …' H-Albion