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The 1549 Rebellions and the Making of Early Modern England

The 1549 Rebellions and the Making of Early Modern England

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Andy Wood
Cambridge University Press, 11/29/2007
EAN 9780521832069, ISBN10: 0521832063

Hardcover, 318 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

This is a major study of the 1549 rebellions, the largest and most important risings in Tudor England. Based upon extensive archival evidence, the book sheds fresh light on the causes, course and long-term consequences of the insurrections. Andy Wood focuses on key themes in the social history of politics, concerning the end of medieval popular rebellion; the Reformation and popular politics; popular political language; early modern state formation; speech, silence and social relations; and social memory and the historical representation of the rebellions. He examines the long-term significance of the rebellions for the development of English society, arguing that the rebellions represent an important moment of discontinuity between the late medieval and the early modern periods. This compelling history of Tudor politics from the bottom up will be essential reading for late medieval and early modern historians as well as early modern literary critics.

Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Preface
Introduction
Part I. Context
1. The 1549 rebellions
2. 'Precious bloody shedding'
repression and resistance, 1549–1553
Part II. Political Language
3. Speech, silence and the recovery of rebel voices
4. Rebel political language
Part III. Consequences
5. The decline of insurrection in later sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century England
6. Memory, myth and representation
the later meanings of the 1549 rebellions
Bibliography
Index.

Review of the hardback: '... brilliant study of the events of 1549 ...' BBC History Magazine