This book examines the varied and fascinating ways that Westminster – traditionally home to the royal court, the fashionable West End and parliament – became the seat of the successive, non-monarchical regimes of the 1640s and 1650s. It first explores the town as the venue that helped to shape the breakdown of relations between the king and parliament in 1640–42. Subsequent chapters explore the role Westminster performed as both the ceremonial and administrative heart of shifting regimes, the hitherto unnoticed militarisation of local society through the 1640s and 1650s, and the fluctuating fortunes of the fashionable society of the West End in this revolutionary context. Analyses of religious life and patterns of local political allegiance and government unveil a complex and dynamic picture, in which the area not only witnessed major political and cultural change in these turbulent decades, but also the persistence of conservatism on the very doorstep of government.
Tabla de materias
Introduction
1. The eye of the storm? Westminster 1640–42
2. ‘The perpetual marching of troops, the ceaseless noise of drums and trumpets’: the militarisation of Westminster
3. Westminster and the state: sites and rites 1642–1660
4. Allegiance and government 1643–60
5. Fashionable society in ‘these our cloudy days’
6. Religion, politics and society in revolutionary Westminster
Conclusion
Bibliography: selected manuscript sources
Index
Sobre el autor
J. F. Merritt is Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of Nottingham