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A Country Divided? English Politics and the Nine Years' War*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 July 2014
Extract
The accession of William III began a revolution in English foreign policy. Under the Dutch king's auspices England joined a Grand Alliance against the France of Louis XIV and shouldered the burdens of a principal partner in a major continental war. Not only did the war place grave financial strains upon the state; the formulation, administration, and execution of war policy also became areas of continual concern. These concerns combined to raise general questions about England's proper role in European affairs and about the proper application of English power in service of those interests. They also cast William III and the politicians into a constitutional no-man's land in which the royal monopoly over war and peace had to contest with the need to secure annual supplies. It has been the historian's task to explain how William III's “continental commitment” to land warfare, alliances, and defense of European liberties survived this political struggle.
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- Copyright © North American Conference on British Studies 1991
Footnotes
An earlier version of this article was presented in New Orleans at the October 1988 meeting of the Western Conference on British Studies. I wish to thank Jeremy Black and my colleague Dennis Showalter for many helpful suggestions during its preparation.
References
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2 Ibid., p. 68.
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4 Horwitz, Henry, Parliament, Policy and Politics in the Reign of William III (Newark, N.J., 1977), p. 313–17Google Scholar. Horwitz stresses the functional nature of political instability, mainly the strains imposed by war finance. He also holds that disagreements over foreign affairs followed a division between Court and Country rather than between Whig and Tory. These are important points; to them should be added a consideration of the content of the rival opinions and the use the politicians made of them.
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49 Elton, G. R., The Tudor Constitution (New York, 1982), pp. 294–95Google Scholar. My own reading of parliamentary debates convinces me that methods of management had not changed since Tudor times. The king played a direct role at the time of his speech from the throne and also in consultation with the politicians. During the first half of William's reign, he relied on his speech.
50 Thomson, , “Parliament and Foreign Policy,” pp. 130–31Google Scholar. William III's dislike of the politicians is well known. In 1690 it reached the threshold of contempt. After announcing his intention to go to Ireland, he described to Portland the long and discolored faces of the Whigs who had wanted him to stay in England. William III to Portland, 7 February 1690. Correspondentie van Willem III en van Hans Willem Bentinck, eersten graaf van Portland, ed. Japikse, N., First Series, 2 vols. (The Hague, 1927), 1: 95Google Scholar. Baxter, , William III, pp. 256–57Google Scholar.
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