Noble Power’s focus is on power in practice, and Brown’s conclusions about how nobles exercised and maintained power are invaluable.

- Heather Parker, University of Guelph, H-Albion

Noble Power’s focus is on power in practice, and Brown’s conclusions about how nobles exercised and maintained power are invaluable.Overall, this is a valuable contribution to the study of early modern Scottish politics.

- Heather Parker, University of Guelph, H-Albion

...the book is refreshingly even-handed in regard both to Scotland's regions and its religious denominations, and the author shows a welcome awareness of the Irish dimension in Scottish and British politics.

- Dr Daniel MacCannel, University of Aberdeen, Reviews in History

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This is an extensively-researched, clearly-written, well-structured, up-to-date book, setting Scotland in the context of studies of other European nobilities.

- Julian Goodare, University of Edinburgh, Scottish Historical Review

'Why do the wicked live on, growing old and increasing in power?' This quotation from Job begins Keith Brown's study of how Scotland's nobility rallied under the pressure of the Reformation and the Covenanting Revolution - a tumultuous period which has generated much historical debate on issues of political authority and power. In this volume Brown builds on his previous book, Noble Society in Scotland, to argue that in spite of the changes brought about by the Reformation, by the recovery of crown authority and by the regal union between England and Scotland, the huge power exercised by the nobility remained fundamentally unaltered. Hence, when political crisis did surface in 1637-8, the crown lacked the means to oppose a noble-led revolution.Noble Power in Scotland discusses the nobility's political relationship with the crown in chapters at either end of this volume, taking the regal union of 1603 as the crucial dividing point. The remainder of the book addresses in turn themes that analyse the various roles nobles inhabited in exercising power. Keith Brown situates the Scottish debate within the wider arena of European nobilities and their enduring power, showing that the Scottish nobility successfully adapted to political change, just as it did to economic and cultural change, to retain its dominant political position throughout the period. Key Features: Nobles as chiefs of clans and lords of Scottish territoriesNobles as warriors and soldiers in domestic and foreign serviceNobles as men of honour Nobles as law-bringers and magistrates Nobles as parliamentarians, royal councillors and courtiers
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Analyses the relations between nobility, crown and state, first in Scotland and then in the first courts of the unified kingdoms.
Domination and LordshipContentsIntroduction: Scotland in 1070NarrativesChapter 1 Out with the Old (1070-1093) Chapter 2 Kings and pretenders (1093-1136)Chapter 3 Building the Scoto-Northumbrian Realm (1136-1157)Chapter 4 Under the Angevin Supremacy (1157-1189)Chapter 5 Settling the Succession (1189-1230)ProcessesChapter 6 PowerChapter 7 Re-working Old Patterns: Rural landscapes and societiesChapter 8 Towns, Burghs and BurgessesChapter 9 NoblesChapter 10 The Making of the Ecclesia ScoticanaGuide to Further ReadingTimelineBibliography
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Deals with the Reformation and Covenanting Revolution extensively

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780748664665
Publisert
2013-05-21
Utgiver
Edinburgh University Press; Edinburgh University Press
Vekt
530 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
G, U, 01, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Redaktør

Om bidragsyterne

Keith Brown is Professor of History at the University of Manchester. He specializes in early modern Scottish History, particularly the history of parliament and of the nobility.