Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 ‘To be Deborah’: the political implications of providentialism under a female ruler
- 2 Announcing the godly common weal: Knox, Aylmer and the parameters of counsel
- 3 Feats of incorporation: the ideological bases of the mixed monarchy
- 4 Contesting the social order: ‘resistance theory’ and the mixed monarchy
- 5 Godly men and nobles: the bicephalic body politic
- 6 Godly men and parliamentarians: the politics of counsel in the 1570s
- 7 Rewriting the common weal: Sir Thomas Smith and the De Republica Anglorum
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index
- IDEAS IN CONTEXT
Afterword
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 ‘To be Deborah’: the political implications of providentialism under a female ruler
- 2 Announcing the godly common weal: Knox, Aylmer and the parameters of counsel
- 3 Feats of incorporation: the ideological bases of the mixed monarchy
- 4 Contesting the social order: ‘resistance theory’ and the mixed monarchy
- 5 Godly men and nobles: the bicephalic body politic
- 6 Godly men and parliamentarians: the politics of counsel in the 1570s
- 7 Rewriting the common weal: Sir Thomas Smith and the De Republica Anglorum
- Afterword
- Bibliography
- Index
- IDEAS IN CONTEXT
Summary
In the span of forty years an individual has been transposed into a symbol.
Roy Strong, Portraits of Queen Elizabeth IElizabeth's accession to the English throne in 1558 posed a crisis of legitimacy to the English political nation, in large part because of her gender. Henry VIII transformed the meaning of kingship by defining England as an empire and himself (and his assumed successor ‘kings of this realm’) as Supreme Head of the Church of England, in the larger European context of Protestant reformation. The regnal sequence after his death and before Elizabeth's accession of a boy king and two queens (Lady Jane Grey and Mary I) of disputable legitimacy greatly complicated that legacy. It invested imperial identity – now seen as necessary to secure Protestantism as well as to preserve England's autonomous status as a nation – in weak vessels. That tainted sequence inevitably implicated religious conviction in political ideology in new ways.
At Elizabeth's accession this pre-history made it necessary for the queen and her apologists to innovate in order to legitimate her rule. They did so most obviously by exploiting elements of a conception of imperial rule first adumbrated in Henry VIII's reign: they identified the nation as elect, and appealed to godly men to act as citizens on behalf of the imperial crown. They also followed John Aylmer in defining monarchical authority as ‘mixed’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Political Culture in the Reign of Elizabeth IQueen and Commonwealth 1558–1585, pp. 235 - 243Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999