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Proceedings of the Privy Council of Queen Elizabeth I, 1582-1583 [ 4 Volume Set]: Three Volume Set [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 2868 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 297x210x15 mm, kaal: 666 g, 4 colour and 6 b/w illus., 2 Hardbacks
  • Sari: Proceedings of the Privy Council of Elizabeth I
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: The Boydell Press
  • ISBN-10: 184383653X
  • ISBN-13: 9781843836537
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 2868 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 297x210x15 mm, kaal: 666 g, 4 colour and 6 b/w illus., 2 Hardbacks
  • Sari: Proceedings of the Privy Council of Elizabeth I
  • Ilmumisaeg: 26-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: The Boydell Press
  • ISBN-10: 184383653X
  • ISBN-13: 9781843836537
Teised raamatud teemal:
Important edition of central government records for Elizabeth I makes vital information available to historians.



By 1540, the Privy Council had become the Crown's principal policy-making and executive arm. Under the later Tudors, it governed England on the sovereign's behalf: conduit and buffer between the itinerant Court and the provinces. A small, elite board imbued with a sense of collective responsibility, the Council sought to implement policy chiefly by issuing orders as letters or warrants. However, the institution's Elizabethan registers - disclosing meeting attendance and summarizing out-going correspondence - are lost for 37% of the reign, while extant registers are incomplete: over-worked clerks omitted many dispatches, even crucial ones, which only survive as either originals or copies, widely dispersed. The longest gap in Kew's register series is June 1582-February 1585/86: a large slice of, arguably, the pivotal decade of Gloriana's incumbency. Although the Elizabethan registers known to the Victorians were published 1893-1907, they appeared inaccurately, lacking significant editorial apparatus.

This four-volume set covers the beginning of that gap and avoids those deficiencies. Part I presents a newly discovered original Privy Council register, comprising 672 entries, presumed destroyed in the January 1618/19 Whitehall Palace fire. Of the actual dispatches for June 1582-June 1583, 103 texts are recoverable, assembled in Part II and cross-referenced to the appropriate register notices, if they exist, so that historians may consult entire documents, rather than rely upon the clerks' often crude abstracts. Ancillary material is printed in nine appendices; the greatest reconstructs each English shire's magistracy. All sources published here are fully contextualized using the latest scholarship.

Parts I and II reveal activity in myriad spheres: political, religious, social, legal and economic; rarer items address foreign affairs. Yet Proceedings of the Privy Council of Queen Elizabeth I, 1582-1583 does more than merely offer rich new sources. The two-volume Introduction firstly describes the register and relates it to conciliar working and archival practices. Next comes contextualization of the Council ideologically and constitutionally. The most comprehensive and original for a generation, this analysis blends legal history and the history of political thought to give an account of the mixed polity, of the tyrannical potential of the royal prerogative and of the mechanism by which the sovereign-state nexus was transformed into a framework of counsel, consent and justice under the monarch's absolute and ordinary prerogatives. The editor then traces the Privy Council's evolution from the medieval King's Council before assessing the 'monarchical republic' thesis in the light of the board's interactions with the queen in 1582-83. Concluding thematic essays show how details in Parts I and II contribute to major revisions of received interpretations. Themes include 'Plague' and 'Landscape and infrastructure'. The long final essay divides: the bulk elucidates England's religious politics of 1572-83, integrating Scottish and continental developments and paying close attention to the growing 'popish' threat, pre-eminently the Jesuit mission of 1580-81; a coda examines the Council's fund-raising campaign to relieve Calvinist Geneva. This important edition of central governmental records will thus be of special interest to everyone concerned with the history of the Elizabethan State and with the doings of its conciliar statesmen.

Arvustused

Fifty years ago as I began doctoral research on Elizabethan government, virtually the first original sources that my supervisor directed me to were the Acts of the Privy Council: an unrivalled bird's-eye view of Elizabethan England through the letters and orders written by those leading government around the monarch. I nevertheless became aware that in the 1580s there was a sad gap in the sequence of books, and I lamented it, looking in vain for further elements in a particular local crisis in which of course the Privy Council had intervened. I thought that we would never fill this silence, but now, astonishingly, David Crankshaw has found one of the original register-books of the 'Acts', bizarrely far from home and now in the national library of Spain. It startlingly illuminates the English Privy Council's multifarious work. His exploration of how the volume travelled from Whitehall across the seas to its present home is just one example of Crankshaw's exceptional scholarship and persistence in producing this monumental edition of such a miraculous survivor of fires, neglect and all the accidents that hamper the work of historical scholarship. There can be no-one more suited to the meticulous investigation and analysis which make these four volumes an outstanding addition to English history. Through the matrix of one crucial document, David Crankshaw in his framing commentary provides us with a unique panorama of late Tudor government. -- Diarmaid MacCulloch, Emeritus Professor of the History of the Church, University of Oxford

List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Editorial conventions
List of abbreviations used in the editorial apparatus
Lists of privy councillors, 1582-83
VOLUME 1:
Introduction
1. Content overview
2. Technical description of the Privy Council register
3. Provenance and nature of the Privy Council register
4. The emergence, status and role of the Tudor Privy Council (i, ii)
VOLUME 2
The emergence, status and role of the Tudor Privy Council (iii, iv)
5. Examples of Privy Council activity, c.1582-c.1583
VOLUME 3: The register, the Dispatches and Appendices
Part I: The Privy Council register, 29 June 1582-20 June 1583
Part II: Privy Council dispatches, 28 June 1582-[ 20] June 1583
Appendices
VOLUME 4: Glossary, Bibliography and Indices
Select glossary
Select bibliography: sources cited
Indices
Index of privy councillors' presence lists
Index of locations of Privy Council meetings
Index of persons, offices and titles
Index of place-names
Index of subjects
Dr DAVID CRANKSHAW lectures on early modern religious history at King's College London. He has published on theecclesiastical patronage of the Elizabethan nobility, the Convocation of 1563 and St Paul's Cathedral.