Brendan Bradshaw
Autor(a) de Christianity in Ireland: Revisiting the Story
Obras de Brendan Bradshaw
Associated Works
Settlement and Society in Medieval Ireland: Studies Presented to F.X. Martin, O.S.A. (1988) — Contribuinte — 11 cópias
Bullan, an Irish studies Journal, v.1, No.1 (Spring 1994) — Contribuinte — 1 exemplar(es)
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Sexo
- male
Membros
Resenhas
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Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 9
- Also by
- 3
- Membros
- 83
- Popularidade
- #218,811
- Avaliação
- 4.3
- Resenhas
- 2
- ISBNs
- 19
This is an in depth look at the Irish policy of the later part of the reign of Henry VIII, arguing that Thomas Cromwell was (as in everything else) a key actor in dismantling the old regime, of leaving Ireland to muddle through under the Earl of Kildare, and that after his fall, two relatively obscure figures from Irish history, Anthony St Leger and Thomas Cusack, engineered the policies of surrender and regrant and of making Ireland a kingdom under Henry VIII in its own right (previously English kings were "Lords of Ireland"). In both cases this was doggedly carried through in the teeth of resistance from the old guard and of vicious court politics in London; it is particularly interesting to see how the officials persuaded Henry to agree to their plans after he had expressed characteristic opposition, or alternatively where they just went ahead and did what they wanted anyway knowing that he was on the other side of the sea and had no easy way of punishing or replacing them.
The claim of the book's title that this was a "constitutional revolution" is a little exaggerated; the old system was overthrown, sure, but that is not really Bradshaw's focus; and the St Leger / Cusack reform policy, after a promising start, wasn't followed through as Henry ran out of money and time, and his successors had other concerns during their brief reigns. (St Leger continued to serve as head of the Irish government, off and on, under both Edward VI and Mary I.) But it's convincing to say that what was going on in the 1530s and 1540s was a genuinely interesting and different constitutional experiment, to incorporate the peripheral but troublesome Irishry into the English-rules realm, and it had a lot of contemporary resonances for me with my own work on unrecognised states.… (mais)