Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, 1653-1654
Author: Mary Anne Everett Wood Green
Publisher:
Published: 1879
Total Pages: 768
ISBN-13:
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Author: Mary Anne Everett Wood Green
Publisher:
Published: 1879
Total Pages: 768
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Great Britain. Public Record Office
Publisher:
Published: 1881
Total Pages: 783
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Mary Anne Everett Green
Publisher:
Published: 1881
Total Pages: 784
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Great Britain. Public Record Office
Publisher:
Published: 1965
Total Pages: 754
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Larry Dale Gragg
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 2003
Total Pages: 254
ISBN-13: 9780199253890
DOWNLOAD EBOOKLarry Gragg challenges the prevailing view of the seventeenth-century English planters of Barbados as architects of a social disaster. Most historians have described them as profligate and immoral, as grasping capitalists who exploited their servants and slaves in a quest for quick riches inthe cultivation of sugar. Yet, they were more than rapacious entrepreneurs. Like English emigrants to other regions in the empire, sugar planters transplanted many familiar governmental and legal institutions, eagerly started families, abided traditional views about the social order, and resistedcompromises in their diet, apparel, and housing, despite their tropical setting. Seldom becoming absentee planters, these Englishmen developed an extraordinary attraction to Barbados, where they saw themselves, as one group of planters explained in a petition, as 'being Englishmentransplanted'.
Author:
Publisher:
Published: 1965
Total Pages: 750
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Sheffield. Free public libraries and museum
Publisher:
Published: 1890
Total Pages: 222
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Charles Edward Smith
Publisher: BRILL
Published: 2024-09-26
Total Pages: 388
ISBN-13: 9004706348
DOWNLOAD EBOOKOn July 4, 1653, the Nominate or Barebones Parliament convened with a minority of committed radicals (Levellers and religious extremists) and a conservative majority of Cromwell’s allies. During acrimonious debates on law reform, the radicals demanded a condensed law book similar to the one adopted in Colonial Massachusetts. These mostly overlooked events reveal a radical wing of Puritanism determined to found a self-governing state, fully cognizant of the real possibility that England would interdict such attempts by force of arms. This work investigates the motives for such a hazardous undertaking, and the possible influences these events had on the colony’s posterity.
Author: David Loewenstein
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2001-03-15
Total Pages: 429
ISBN-13: 1139429841
DOWNLOAD EBOOKDavid Loewenstein's Representing Revolution in Milton and his Contemporaries is a wide-ranging exploration of the interactions of literature, polemics and religious politics in the English Revolution. Loewenstein highlights the powerful spiritual beliefs and religious ideologies in the polemical struggles of Milton, Marvell and their radical Puritan contemporaries during these revolutionary decades. By examining a wide range of canonical and non-canonical writers - John Lilburne, Winstanley the Digger and Milton, amongst others - he reveals how radical Puritans struggled with the contradictions and ambiguities of the English Revolution and its political regimes. His portrait of a faction-riven, violent seventeenth-century revolutionary culture is an original and significant contribution to our understanding of these turbulent decades and their aftermath. By placing Milton's great poems in the context of the period's radical religious politics, it should be of interest to historians as well as literary scholars.
Author: Abigail L. Swingen
Publisher: Yale University Press
Published: 2015-02-17
Total Pages: 288
ISBN-13: 0300189443
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAbigail L. Swingen’s insightful study provides a new framework for understanding the origins of the British Empire while exploring how England’s original imperial designs influenced contemporary English politics and debates about labor, economy, and overseas trade. Focusing on the ideological connections between the growth of unfree labor in the English colonies, particularly the use of enslaved Africans, and the development of British imperialism during the early modern period, the author examines the overlapping, often competing agendas of planters, merchants, privateers, colonial officials, and imperial authorities in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.