Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- BOOK XI THE COMMONWEALTH IN ENGLAND, 1649—1653
- BOOK XII THE PROTECTORATE OF OLIVER CROMWELL, 1653–1658
- BOOK XIII FALL OF THE PROTECTORATE AND THE COMMONWEALTH. RESTORATION OF THE MONARCHY, 1658—1660
- BOOK XIV THE FIRST FIVE YEARS UNDER CHARLES II. THE RESTORATION OF THE ANGLICAN CHURCH
- BOOK XV THE DUTCH WARS OF CHARLES II. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE PROTESTANT AND PARLIAMENTARY CHARACTER OF THE CONSTITUTION 1664—1674
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAP. I The first war with Holland, in the year 1665
- CHAP. II Influence of France upon the continuation of war and upon the peace
- CHAP. III Fall of the Lord Chancellor Clarendon
- CHAP. IV Convention at the Hague in January 1668. Triple Alliance
- CHAP. V Government and Parliament in the year 1668
- CHAP. VI Secret alliance with France, 1669, 1670
- CHAP. VII Parliamentary sessions from, 1669 to 1671
- CHAP. VIII The second war against Holland, 1672
- CHAP. IX Origin of the Test Act
- CHAP. X Peace with Holland
- CHAP. XI Union of Parliament with the Prince of Orange
CHAP. VII - Parliamentary sessions from, 1669 to 1671
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- BOOK XI THE COMMONWEALTH IN ENGLAND, 1649—1653
- BOOK XII THE PROTECTORATE OF OLIVER CROMWELL, 1653–1658
- BOOK XIII FALL OF THE PROTECTORATE AND THE COMMONWEALTH. RESTORATION OF THE MONARCHY, 1658—1660
- BOOK XIV THE FIRST FIVE YEARS UNDER CHARLES II. THE RESTORATION OF THE ANGLICAN CHURCH
- BOOK XV THE DUTCH WARS OF CHARLES II. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE PROTESTANT AND PARLIAMENTARY CHARACTER OF THE CONSTITUTION 1664—1674
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAP. I The first war with Holland, in the year 1665
- CHAP. II Influence of France upon the continuation of war and upon the peace
- CHAP. III Fall of the Lord Chancellor Clarendon
- CHAP. IV Convention at the Hague in January 1668. Triple Alliance
- CHAP. V Government and Parliament in the year 1668
- CHAP. VI Secret alliance with France, 1669, 1670
- CHAP. VII Parliamentary sessions from, 1669 to 1671
- CHAP. VIII The second war against Holland, 1672
- CHAP. IX Origin of the Test Act
- CHAP. X Peace with Holland
- CHAP. XI Union of Parliament with the Prince of Orange
Summary
Whilst this union with the Catholic world and the negotiations with France, which were as much religious as political, were being arranged and furthered through strange gradations of secrecy, the question about the dissolution of Parliament had been once more discussed in the Privy Council. Buckingham and the two Secretaries of State, Arlington and Trevor, were in favour of it; Albemarle, the Duke of York, and the Lord Keeper Bridgeman, were opposed to it. Bridgeman demonstrated that, in spite of all the promises of the Dissenters, a Parliament in which they had the majority offered no security either for the crown or for the peace of the country. This opinion was also shared by the King, who now already conceived the hope of approaching the matter better at some other time, after the conclusion of the agreement with France. As he now stood on better terms with his brother, he hoped to moderate the opposition by a personal understanding with its leaders. He entered into a formal negotiation with them, which was concerned principally with two points; on his side, that he should desist from his alliance with the Dissenters, on the side of the Parliament, that it should make an arrangement for the payment of the King's debts, and above all that it should not proceed to those direct attacks on the ministers which it had so long and so seriously threatened.
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- A History of EnglandPrincipally in the Seventeenth Century, pp. 505 - 514Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1875