1. Radicalism and the English revolution

Mario Caricchio

Glenn Burgess

Ariel Hessayon

Nicholas McDowell

Nigel Smith

2. Britain 1660-1714: competing historiographies

Giovanni Tarantino

Mark Knights

Yaakov Mascetti

3. The Church of England in the eighteenth century

Guglielmo Sanna

William Gibson

Robert G. Ingram

Robert D. Cornwall

4. Non-British readings of the English revolution

Stefano Villani

Gabi Mahlberg

Pietro Messina

5. Rediscovering radicalism in the British Isles and Ireland in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth centuries

David Davis

Jared van Duinen

Chloë Houston

Manfred Brod

Levente Juhász

Cromohs Virtual Seminars

Radicalism and the English Revolution

Mario Caricchio
Università di Firenze

M. Caricchio, "Radicalism and the English Revolution", in M. Caricchio, G. Tarantino, eds., Cromohs Virtual Seminars. Recent historiographical trends of the British Studies (17th-18th Centuries), 2006-2007: 1-5
<http://www.fupress.net/public/journals/49/Seminar/caricchio_radicalism.html>



 

1. Twenty-years of revisionist scholarship changed the view of what had first been known as the “Puritan revolution” and then “the English revolution”. Between 1970 and 1990, explanations of the English Civil War were re-shaped by setting it back in its proper context of early modern politics. This was a reaction to a kind of social determination of politics emphasising conflict that culminated in Lawrence Stone’s The Causes of the English revolution. Since then a return to a detailed political narrative has underlined the traditional and hierarchical values that held currency in the consensual framework of early modern British politics. The idea of Puritanism as the ideology for a modern revolution gave way to the “rise of Arminianism” thesis. In this view, Laudian Church reforms had been the real agents of innovation causing the breakdown of the “Calvinistic consensus” previously existing within the Church of England and led consequently to the civil war. Inquiries about the impact of the civil wars of the 1640s on the provinces showed that the bulk of the population remained neutral and mass movements entered rather into action to defend their own traditional way of life: these were the Clubmen, whom John Morrill defined as “radical conservatives”.
We have learnt in time that the varieties of revisionist historical studies did not culminate in a ‘school’ with a shared interpretation. Or, to use a metaphor of one of its leading representatives, “all versions of revisionism, like all brands of whisky, enjoyed certain broad similarities”.[1] As a non-British occasional drinker, I would see this unity in a tendency to exalt a somewhat ‘traditional’ dimension of the English civil war, as something comparable to the past – wars of religion and baronial revolts – more than to the future, in a self-represented avowal to escape anachronism. Such an approach produced a new understanding of that momentous period of English history. Politics and religion had their own structures and patterns returned to them as central aspects of the story. The British multiple kingdoms context, Conrad Russell’s way to the English civil war, affirmed itself in 1990s historical studies, providing the outline of a new synthesis. The revisionist approach, however, had its casualties.
The major ones were radical ideas and movements. In the climate out of which the “revisionist revolt” was born in the aftermath of Hill’s World turned upside down, more than one wished to push men such as the prophet Thomas Tany and the Ranter Abiezer Coppe back into the old box of the “lunatic fringe”, possibly with Winstanley, the Digger, and Lilburne, the Leveller. “Revolution” became a concept of uncertain meaning, if it had any at all, in relation to the English 1640s. Radicals were displaced as out of context. Levellers and Diggers, which many Whig and Marxist historians had seen as popular movements representing the ‘democratic’ apex of the revolution, were marginalised. Between the mid 1980s and the early 1990s, Jonathan Clark and Conal Condren, with some help from J.C. Davis’ Fear, Myth and History, tried definitively to categorise the radicals, as people that, at best, did not know what they were speaking about.[2]
The erasing of radicalism did not garner much following. Rather, it represented a problem to be solved in the new syntheses that began to arise. Russellian explanations of the civil war stopped short of analysing the political radicalisation which shaped the experience of the 1640s and led to Charles I's execution.[3] In Mark Kishlanky’s account of the Stuart century radicals, in the shape of religious enthusiasts, appeared as ironic diabuli ex machina precipitating the temporary end of monarchy: agents in a “revolution” “born of the axe” and hardly surviving a decade.[4] To my mind, these outcomes have attested to a lasting difficulty in dealing with radicalism. This has been due to the prolonged evasion of the need for a telos, diagnosed in a perceptive essay by Glenn Burgess. All historical writing moves towards a telos, he argued, and radicalism was a privileged telos for the historians of the English Civil War:

There is nothing particularly unusual about either baronial revolts or religious wars, but there is something unusual about the English revolution – radicalism. It is this that has meant that it has never been totally absurd to see the English revolution as a revolution, comparable with those of the French and the Russians. [...] When before have baronial rebellions produced a Gerrard Winstanley?[5]

Because of radicalism the English revolution stands alone among past rebellions and religious wars and among the seventeenth-century European revolts in Spain, Naples and France.
New ways of addressing radicalism and revolution were increasingly sought in English-speaking historiography in the last decade of the twentieth century. In part, they have developed as an effort from within revisionism to supersede its own limits and in part, they came from without as a way to respond to its challenges. Jonathan Scott’s argument that radicalism “was the English Revolution”[6] has started the new century by closing, in a way, what could be termed a phase of rediscovery. In this brief contribution I aim to chart some of the ways through which radicalism has been rediscovered and hint at some problems it continues to pose.

2. Who were the radicals of the English revolution? They were, following Scott’s outline, the Levellers, Diggers, Ranters, Fifth-Monarchists, Quakers and republicans. They represented “an innovative intellectual response to the unprecedented practical circumstances, whether negative (the disappearance of traditional institutions) or positive (victorious conduct in war)”.[7] Scott rightly suggests that these labels be taken as several stages in the radical response to a rapidly changing context more than actual contemporaneous groups. However, as a start to this discussion, we should say that, except for the republicans, they were the protagonists of the “world turned upside down” framed by Christopher Hill. His idea about a "revolt within the revolution" effected in a greater sense than the new generation of British historians seem aware, a revision of his own previous accounts. This revision could be discussed in respect of his Marxism: he was a Marxist for whom ideas counted and were not a mere reflection of social conditions and class interest. Or it could be evaluated in respect of the twentieth-century tradition of studies on the ‘democratic’ movements of the English revolution, in which Marxist and Whig approaches combined. This tradition was mostly consistent in focussing on the secular aspects of the Levellers' politics. The World Turned Upside Down displaced the Levellers from the centre-stage, introducing instead a myriad of little-considered religious ideas, individuals and groups, though still searching in them seeds of secular social and political meanings.[8]
The most problematic shortcoming in Hill’s account was a quasi-automatic equation of radical and popular ideas, since he viewed the English revolution as characterised by class-conflict. Following Morrill’s Revolt in the Provinces it has been clear that the popular conservative defence of traditional community, not popular radicalism, was also the rule during the English civil war.[9] In the same period also, the debate among the leftwing historians of the History Workshop group cast light on the ambiguities of the association between radical ideas and people in early modern Europe and Britain.[10] Therefore, during the 1980s historians who had been trained in Hill’s teachings acknowledged that an undoubted religious radicalism did exist during the revolution, which only a minority of “ordinary people” represented. At any rate, in the wake of revisionist critique, radicalism seemed to be reduced to a catalyst of conservative forces.[11] It survived on the plane of expression: studies on radicalism progressively took the shape of studies about radical religion and the radical word. As an epigraph to this process, we could choose Nigel Smith’s assertion that “by the summer of 1660 the revolution was lost, but literature had triumphed”.[12] Winstanley, Walwyn, Coppe, not so much at ease in the political world of the British multiple kingdoms context, entered into the English literary canon. Even if “revolution” had become tremendously old-fashioned among English-speaking historians – as one reviewer has recently written – it cannot be denied that the poetry and the prose of the period “by any fair comparison with what came before and what came after” were “either revolutionary or at least radical”.[13]
This sounds like a retreat from political and social context but, in effect, is only partially the case. In a way, radicalism was returning to the literary field from which it was born to the attention of twentieth century historiography: the Levellers and the Diggers became an established scholarly topic thanks to American literary scholars, who firstly became aware of a host of pamphleteers around Milton.[14] To my mind, the literary departments’ lasting interest in the English revolution is a consequence of the strong historical relationship between the sudden and hitherto unknown outburst of printed works in the 1640s and radical ideas. While the revisionist sharp critique of exclusive reliance on printed sources has pushed a rethink of how to deal with early modern printed matter and propaganda, it has also at times argued for a ‘high road to true history’ through manuscript sources that had no epistemological foundation and risked missing the specificity of the “broader political nation” of the English seventeenth century.[15] Literary studies have lately met a strand of historical studies on this ground. A number of historians in the 1990s began to address an early modern “public sphere” born out of the English revolution. Some pursued this in an avowed attempt to re-sow the ties with sociological and theoretical approaches, which had been severed by the “revisionist revolt”.[16]
“Public sphere” is a Habermasian concept that bears, in my opinion, some basic problems when applied to the seventeenth century. Nonetheless, it has some merits insofar as it helps to conceptualize the novelty of political communication in the 1640s. In these years, for historians such as David Zaret, print changed the rules of political struggle, infringing the limits of traditional political culture, creating an enlarged space for popular politics and moving towards an incipient democratic culture. While revising some aspects of the Habermasian concept – namely the timing of the birth and “bourgeois” social determination of the “public sphere”– this kind of approach again tends to shape a far too simple drive from religion to secular reason, not least by selecting its sources.[17] Instead, the “invention of the public sphere” in the English revolution runs together at least with the “invention of the newspaper”. From this perspective, Joad Raymond has warned that the notion of a seventeenth century “public sphere” has to make room not just for instrumentality, but also for conflicting religious and political views, heterogeneity of printed texts and active manipulation by readers. In this sense, the fundamental change in political communication during the 1640s is best viewed in relation to the eclectic nature of the “pamphlet”.[18]
However, when attention is directed to the change in political communication through print and public debate, two important results are achieved. On the one hand, a context is set where literate and oral discourses on state, church and society meet. The “bricolage”, the “interaction” between elite and popular languages gave rise to “radical fusion”[19] in public. Moreover, all sides participated in the public area of debate: it was neither the privilege of parliamentarians nor royalists, of Presbyterians or of “Sectaries” and Levellers, of conservative or of radicals.[20] It was their sphere of contest through which all of them contributed to the change in political culture.
On the other hand, radicals again found room to play an important role in this English revolution, which could hardly be confined to high politics and/or the coup of a handful of “enthusiasts”. Milton’s rational argument for freedom of the press, the Levellers’ “petitionary movement” for constitutional reform, the “imaginative gesture”, the “incorporeal performance” of the divine inspiration, the irreducible verbal moves which were at the heart of the Seekers’, Diggers’ and Ranters’ battle for religious toleration and political and social transformation; all these have their place within the public discourse of the English revolution. The pamphlet was for all of them, in the appropriate words of Raymond, the means “to extend the efficacy of communication beyond the boundaries of the parish and congregation”.[21] Quakers, heirs to the 1640s, represented a collective author and an intense spiritual religion through their pamphlets, so shaping the first popular political and religious movement of national dimension.[22]

3. Religion was the key issue highlighted by revisionist historiography, by which it might surpass its own limits and encompass an understanding of the themes of radicalism and revolution. Burgess’s essay, with which I started this discussion, rightly envisaged it at the centre of the historical agenda at the end of the 1980s. John Morrill had already begun to explain the collapse of consensus politics in 1641-1642, and the capacity of the Parliamentarian front to mobilize a “cross-section of the nation”, by Puritan ideological dynamism, that is its quest for godly reformation framed by an anti-popery rhetoric and ideology.[23] The idea of the one-way relationship between a Laudian 'revolutionary' challenge and Puritan 'conservative' response came to be revised by the historian who had so influentially originated it.[24] The 1990s therefore assisted a return of some sort of Puritan revolution, either in terms of a sudden seizure of the political initiative by a small ideological, embattled but previously marginal minority, or in terms of the ultimate result of a “growing cultural force”.[25] “Emphasis on religion” appeared then, as Peter Lake put it, as “the continuation of revisionism by other means”.[26]
The relationship between religion and radicalism, however, could also dispense with the category of Puritanism. According to J. C. Davis, a fundamental religious drive against human forms had characterised the unique case in Europe of “radicalism in a traditional society”: this was a revolutionary “aspiration” to a new world of spiritual substance beyond human invention that was impeded, nonetheless, from effectiveness as a political project by its intrinsic anti-formalist mould. Here was the solution to the riddle of intellectual “leaps” which started the modern debate about liberty and authority in an unchanged society.[27] One end to this line is Scott’s synthesis.
According to Scott the correct context of the radical experience of the mid-century revolution, through all its varieties from Levellers to republicans, is the “European reformation” and its tensions. He sees it as a phase of the process of radicalism-revolution that enervates and competes with the two other processes characterising the “troubles” of the British seventeenth century: Caroline state-building and Restoration. Republicanism and Restoration radicalism were, in turn, two more phases of the English revolution, understood as an intellectual process embracing the first and second halves of the century. This point of view allows an illustration of how the different intellectual European contexts of the radical Reformation and Renaissance concur in giving radicalism its shape, and a perception of their common ground: a Christian moral aspiration to freedom from oppression. Born out of the 1640s institutional meltdown, mid-seventeenth-century radicals founded this in an anti-formalist idea of religious experience, which framed their “root and branch” critique of existing Church and State institutions and their quest for practical realization of the moral and social substance of Christianity – unity, peace, charity and equality. The Levellers transferred all of these into the political realm by articulating a constantly growing catalogue of religious, political, economic and social oppressions to be redressed. Therefore, civil war radicals sought freedom from institutions under God’s government, while remaining caught in the anti-formalist trap of clearly seeing their end without being able to conceive of their means. With such a scope, they soon came to be disillusioned by the 1649 revolution which changed the forms of oppression without changing its substance. Republicanism now tried to tackle the issue of government, responding, as it was, to the need for a new political settlement in Britain. Responding to practical circumstance and concerned more with spirit than with form and constitution, as Blair Worden described Milton’s politics, English republicanism added to the radicalism of the 1640s insofar as it sought fulfilment of Christian moral liberty and of a basic idea of self-government through institutions.[28]
In this perspective, the radicals’ contribution to the political fracture caused by the abolition of monarchy and the establishment of a Commonwealth appears to be among its “incidental consequences”. Its substance was intellectual and cultural: the English revolution was indeed “an intellectual process, or phenomenon of belief, though with a crucial practical context and some spectacular constitutional as well as literary consequences”. As with literary studies, its core is “English radical imagination”, which was “refracted” through its Restoration phase and adaptation to institutional reconstruction towards the Glorious revolution and the Enlightenment.

4. A comparative approach to the European context has often gone hand in hand with this re-shaping of radicalism in religious terms. The peculiar religious situation as a potential for radicalization was one of the main points of critique raised by Ann Hughes to the British multiple kingdoms thesis of Conrad Russell. Russellian studies placed the Stuart monarchy side by side with other European composite monarchies, but failed to account for different outcomes of the contemporary revolts that affected them. For Hughes, the division of the English on matters of church and religion created the conditions for an ideological clash, in which, moreover, the English discontents could find an alliance with the Scots. But other grounds existed for the collapse of the centre of the British composite monarchy in striking contrast, for example, with the quelled ‘nationalist’ revolts in the provinces of the Spanish monarchy. Albeit without a professional bureaucracy, the English state was a highly centralised body, which had integrated the bulk of the local ruling elite into its structure. Radicalization, absent in other European cases, was linked both to the peculiar religious division within the British Isles and the peculiar structure of the English state.[29]
As the "new social history" has demonstrated the parish in England was a political forum. A continuing negotiation of authority and subordination featured within it: gossip, rough music, libel, legal disputes, rioting, petitioning, voting and rebellion represented the diverse forms of conducting and solving conflict. They constituted elements of a “popular political culture”.[30] These were also the means by which the “ordinary people” shaped modern Europe on the continent, according to recent studies on the sometime called “contentious politics”.[31] In England, nonetheless, an increasingly richer “middling” or “better” sort of men were changing the framework of popular politics by moving into the local ruling elite and internalising the language and the values of the state. Puritanism, while providing, to the “middling sort of men”, an ideology to discipline the lower orders, also offered an interpretation of the contemporary crisis that connected fear of popery to more direct constitutional issues, such as the appeal to frequent Parliaments. National and local issues were so interlocked, that a viable reading of the political crisis of the early seventeenth-century could envisage the broad involvement of the “middling sort” in an open political process as a remedy for the conceivable “corruption” of a government of the few.[32] These elements composed that “popularity” which Charles I feared, one which was increasingly becoming reality thanks to a growing network of information and political debate.[33]
London was a particular environment for “the politics of the parish”, as the research of Peter Lake and David Como has recently stressed.[34] A metropolitan centre like London, where preachers in search of fortune tried to emerge through the credit and allegiance of lay parishioners, was a world of intra-puritan disputes that made dissent and heterodoxy a possibility within orthodoxy. Socio-cultural mechanisms governing the London godly community show that until the decade before the revolution “orthodoxy” had been an “achieved effect”: a product of a “myriad of agreements to disagree” which succeeded, until this point, in massaging into quiescence the conflicting claims to orthodoxy by rival ministers and their socially heterogeneous lay following. Those mechanisms worked until godly leading ministers had in licensing and clerical authorities an ally condescending to their self-regulation. This meant the existence of a “London Puritan underground” nurtured by manuscript exchanges, private conferences, pulpit denunciations, correspondence networks, circulation of papers, rumours and anecdotes. In this sphere the involvement of London parishioners of the middling and lower sort was possible, while a common stock of orthodox puritan beliefs were liable to mix with Familist and Antinomian spiritual tenets. The capability of Puritans to be self-regulating broke down when licensing and clerical authorities under Laud influence turned to exploiting intra-puritan divergences in order to show that Puritanism was intrinsically subversive. Then, more distinctly sectarian and heterodox influences made their way into the London godly community with greater ease.
Como’s and Lake’s perspective from London thus questions the idea of Puritanism as an ideology for the control and order of new elites, emerging from studies on provincial communities. Moreover, in underlining the role of laity and of members of the lower sort in the internal development of Puritanism in London, they again put the issue of the relationship between religion, popular politics and radicalism on the agenda of historical studies. Finally they bring the “rise of Arminianism” thesis to terms with Puritan dynamism. Arminianism mattered

not because it transformed a statically Calvinist Puritanism into a radically oppositionist movement but because it radically changed the institutional, political and cultural circumstances within which the inherently fissiparous and dynamic elements at the heart of mainstream Puritanism had hitherto been controlled and contained.[35]

In such a perspective, internal dynamism and pressures from without are balanced in the emergence of 1640s radicalism. In part, radical spiritual and antinomian tenets were developed from within Puritan tradition and experience. In part they also resulted from exposure to a growing sectarian challenge which became prominent because of the breakdown of Church consensus during the 1630s under Laudian initiative. A new change in context would have opened the intra-puritan disputes into a “genuine ‘public sphere’” with the de facto collapse of censorship in the 1640s.

5. Radicalism and English revolution are not on a high road, but at a crossroads. Historians seem to place them where a number of contexts intersect. This could be an answer to the question of the “nature of the English revolution”, which, as John Morrill put it by citing Hill, required attention to be paid more to “environment” than to “heredity”.[36] This is a two-sided issue. On the one hand, there is the radicalization of conflict that shattered the unity of the “political nation” at the beginning of the 1640s and precipitated England into the civil war. On the other hand, there is the problem of late 1640s radicalism, which Morrill, envisaging a comparison between the Levellers and the Clubmen, raised in a stimulating question: how “Leveller pamphlets and petitions combined deeply regressive economic and social ideas with a core commitment to religious liberty and to a political doctrine born of experience of Independent churches, all bound together in an innovative natural rights framework”?[37] In this question and in its possible answer, popular participation and radical ideas still stand at the heart of the matter. The varieties of the English religious experience together with the widening or thickening[38] publicity of discourses seem to be the decisive turning on the map: where the last war of religion becomes a revolution.
Evaluating radicalism on this turning remains the crux. There is a line dividing the radicalization of conflict and radicalism that, to my reading of recent studies, appears to be blurred. This is possibly a result of a concentration on the (common) origins and context of the two phenomena, leaving out content and ends. I see this kind of risk, for example, in Ann Hughes’s recent important contribution to an understanding of English Presbyterian politics. She refers to Zaret’s insights about the “public sphere” in which all sides participated, and her views concur with Como and Lake’s suggestion that publicity of discourses was also a result of mainstream Puritanism’s drive to a dialogical construction of orthodoxy. In this perspective, she characterises Presbyterians as a “radical movement”, for they engaged in public debate and exploited propaganda to foster a “moral, social and cultural transformation” of England.[39]
Could one argue, instead, that Presbyterians only took part in an advanced phase of a radicalized conflict? This was perfectly possible at every level in the structure of early modern politics: the whole of Europe was experiencing such forms of intensified conflict and did not know revolution. One may add that the explosion of pamphlet production did not result everywhere in lasting changes in political communication: the French Mazarinades is one example. On the British side of the Channel, the “radical conservatism” of Clubmen, in the light of recent studies on the political culture of “ordinary people”, appears to be nothing other than a continuation of the traditional popular politics of the parish in a new context. Could one argue that the Presbyterians, mutatis mutandis, were also continuing a form of traditional politics while endorsing public debate and contest? In other words, that they were “conservative” in opposition to some others that were “radical” in terms of the religious and political perspective they advanced in the same context?
The issue obviously relates to the intellectual and practical scope of radicalism. What made the difference between Clubmen on the one hand and the Levellers and Diggers on the other was not only the centrality of the religious experience of the “hotter sort of puritans”, but also the way in which the radicals framed them in a new kind of popular politics. In trying to interpret social change in the urban and rural environments, they spoke for themselves and developed through print ideas and action for fundamental change in State and Church. This is why one could also say that the Levellers’ contribution to the modern concept of popular sovereignty was more in their practice of mass politics than in their programmes.[40]
As Scott argues, Levellers and Diggers are varieties of a struggle that enjoyed a fundamental unity. I see this point of unity as the juncture where radical perspectives departed from war of religion. Presbyterians took part in the public debate in order to control it and silence the widening religious experiences of the 1640s. They fought a war of religion in the name of the one transcendental Truth. Radicals were those for whom the issue of error itself became irrelevant in the context of the public debate, as Hughes acknowledges of men such as Saltmarsh and Walwyn. It seems to me that a common form of spiritual religion suggested to them and others like Robert Bacon and Joshua Sprigge, the Levellers, Diggers and Ranters that the new kind of communication they were living was “Christ rising in sons and daughters”, and fought accordingly in the religious and, to a lesser extent, political sphere. There are grounds to say that radicals fought for a non-confessional state as a way out of the wars of religion, a rarity in early-modern Europe. I would say that Presbyterians fought instead for Geneva: they were conservative since they aimed to maintain the principles of confessional politics in a context that was changing. I would suggest in other words that radicalism can be understood at the crossroads between religion and public debate. Radicals were not “ahead of their time”. They were not just reactive and responsive. They were interpreting, and acting in, a new context according to an awareness of its novelty.
Were they just ‘imagining’ change and revolution? Or did they contribute actively to change and revolution, before being disillusioned and defeated? Are inquiries into the radical networks liable to provide a view of the social and communicative framework in which lower sort puritans such as Thomas Tany or Gerrard Winstanley participated in shaping the course of the revolution?


 

References

[1] C. Russell, Unrevolutionary England, London, Hambledon Press, p. IX.

[2] C. Condren, The Language of Politics in Seventeenth-Century England, New York, St. Martin Press, 1994; J.C.D. Clark, Revolution and Rebellion. State and Society in England in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, Cambridge U.P:, 1986; J. C. Davis, Fear, Myth and History. The Ranters and the Historians, Cambridge U.P., 1986. Davis’s position was rather about ‘rethinking’ radicalism, see below.

[3] C. Russell, The Fall of the British Monarchies, 1637-1642, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1991.

[4] M. Kishlansky, A Monarchy Transformed. Britain 1603-1714, London, Allen Lane The Penguin Press, 1996.

[5] G. Burgess, On Revisionism: an Analysis of Early Stuart Historiography, “The Historical Journal”, XXXIII, 3, 1990, pp. 625, 627.

[6] J. Scott, England's Troubles: Seventeenth-century English Political Instability in European Context, Cambridge U.P., 2000, p. 33.

[7] Ibid., p. 242.

[8] C. Hill, The World Turned Upside Down. Radical Ideas during the English Revolution, Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1975 [1972].

[9] J. Morrill, The Revolt in the Provinces 1630-1648. The People of England and the Tragedies of the War, London/New York, Longman, 1999 [1976].

[10] P. Burke, People’s History and Total History, in R. Samuel (ed.), People’s History, People’s History and Socialist Theory, London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981, pp. 7-8.

[11] B. Reay, “Introduction” to J.F. McGregor, B. Reay (eds.), Radical Religion in the English Revolution, Oxford U.P., 1984, pp. 1-21.

[12] N. Smith, Anglia Rediviva. Literature and Revolution in England 1640-1660, New Haven, Yale U.P., 1994, p. 19; See also p. 6 and 362.

[13] D. Woolf, “Review of N.H. Keeble (ed.), Companion to Writing of the English Revolution, Cambridge U.P., 2001”, H-Albion, H-Net Reviews, July, 2002, <http://www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=9281028323067>, [10/2/2006].

[14] W. Haller (ed.), Tracts on Liberty in the Puritan Revolution, New York, 1979 [1933-34], vol I, “Preface” and pp. 3-7.

[15] R. Cust, A. Hughes, “Introduction” to The English Civil War, London, Arnold, 1997, p. 23.

[16] D. Zaret, Origins of Democratic Culture: Printing, Petitions and the Public Sphere in Early Modern England, Princeton U.P., 2000.

[17] Zaret’s focus is obviously on petitions. Steven Pincus indicates the legacy of the 1650s radicals and republicans in asserting that the language of political economy and national interest characterised the newborn English public sphere from then on: see S. Pincus, Protestantism and Patriotism: Ideologies and the Making of English Foreign Policy 1650-1668, Cambridge, 1996, esp. 441-452; id., The Making of A Great Power? Universal Monarchy, Political Economy, and the Transformation of English Political Culture, “The European Legacy”, V, , 4, 2000, pp. 535-541.

[18] J. Raymond, The Newspaper, Public Opinion, and the Public Sphere in the Seventeenth Century, in id. (ed.), News, Newspapers, and Society in Early Modern Britain, London, Frank Cass, 1999, pp. 109-140; id., Pamphlets and Pamphleteering in Early Modern Britain, Cambridge U.P., 2003.

[19] N. McDowell, The English Radical Imagination. Culture, Religion, and Revolution, 1630-1660, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 2003.

[20] D. Zaret, Origins of Democratic Culture, cit., p. 88.

[21] J. Raymond, Pamphlets and Pamphleteering, cit., pp. 224-247; N. Smith, Anglia Rediviva, cit., pp. 131-139, 153.

[22] K. Peters, Patterns of Quaker Authorship, 1652-56, in T.N. Corns, D. Loewenstein (eds.), The Emergence of Quaker Writings, London, Frank Cass, pp. 6-24; N. Smith, Non-conformist voices and books, in J. Barnard, D.F. McKenzie (eds.), The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain 1557-1695, vol. IV, Cambridge, 2002, pp. pp. 410-430, esp. 424-426.

[23] J. Morrill, Charles I, Tyranny and the English Civil War, in id., The Nature of the English Revolution, London/newYork, Longman, pp. 304-305; id. The Religious Context of the English Civil War, ibid., pp. 45-68; id., The Attack on the Church of England in the Long Parliament, ibid., pp. 69-90 266-270. These essays were all firstly published between 1985 and 1990.

[24] N. Tyacke, Puritanism, Arminianism and Counter-Revolution, in C. Russell (ed.), The Origins of the English Civil War, London, MacMillan, 1992 [1973], pp. 119-143; id., The ‘rise of Puritanism’ and the Legalizing of Dissent, 1571-1719, in O.P. Grell, J. Israel, N. Tyacke (eds.), From Persecution to Toleration. The Glorious Revolution and Religion in England, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1991, pp. 17-49.

[25] K. Sharpe, The Personal Rule of Charles I, New Haven/London, Yale U.P., pp. 731-765; J. Eales, A Road to Revolution: the Continuity of Puritanism, in C. Durston, J. Eales (eds.), The Culture of English Puritanism, Basingstoke/London, MacMillan, 1996, pp. 184-209

[26] P. Lake, “Introduction” to G. Nuttall, The Holy Spirit in Puritan Faith and Experience, Chicago/London, University of Chicago Press, 1992, p. xv.

[27] J.C. Davis, Radicalism in a Traditional Society: the Evaluation of Radical Thought in the English Commonwealth 1649-1660, “History of Political Thought”, III, 2, 1982, pp. 193-213; id. Against Formality: One Aspect of the English Revolution, “Transactions of the Royal Historical Society”, VI ser., 3, 1993, pp. 265-288.

[28] J. Scott, England's Troubles, cit., 229-341; B. Worden, Milton and Marchamont Needham, in D. Armitage, A. Himy, Q. Skinner (eds.), Milton and Republicanism, Cambridge U.P., p. 170.

[29] A. Hughes, The Causes of the English Civil War, Basingstoke/London, MacMillan, 1991, pp., 32-61. On English State formation, S. Hindle, The State and Social Change in Early Modern England 1550-1640, Basingstoke, MacMillan, 2000; M. Braddick, State Formation in Early modern England, c. 1500-1700, Cambridge U.P., 2000.

[30] K. Wrightson, The Politics of the Parish in Early Modern England, in P. Griffiths, A. Fox, S. Hindle (eds.), The experience of Authority in Early Modern England, Basingstoke, MacMillan, 1996, pp. 10-46.

[31] W. Te Brake, Shaping History. Ordinary People in European Politics 1500-1700, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1998, <http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft500006j4/>; C. Tilly, Contention and Democracy in Europe, 1650-2000, Cambridge U.P., 2004. See also: P. Blickle (ed.), Resistance, Representation, and Community, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1997; A. Würgler, Voices from among the “Silent masses”: Humble petitions and Social Conflicts in early Modern central Europe, “International Review of Social History”, XLVI, suppl. 9, 2001, pp. 11-34.

[32] K.E. Wrightson, English Society 1580-1680, London, Hutchinson,1982, pp. 148-182, 206-228; A. Hughes, The Causes of the English Civil War, cit., pp. 84-97, 130-132; S. Hindle, The State and Social Change, cit., pp. 23-32.

[33] On “popularity” see the essays by T. Cogswell, R. Cust and P. Lake in T. Cogswell, R. Cust, P. Lake (eds.), Politics, Religion and Popularity in early Stuart Britain. Essays in Honour of Conrad Russell, Cambridge U.P., 2002, pp. 211-289.

[34] The concluding paragraphs of this section are based on: D. Como, P. Lake, Puritanism, Antinomians and Laudians in the Caroline London: The Strange Case of Peter Shaw and its Contexts, “Journal of Ecclesiastical History”, 50, 4, 1999, pp. 684-715; P. Lake, D. Como, “Orthodoxy” and Its Discontents: Dispute Settlement and the Production of “Consensus” in the London (Puritan) “Underground”, “The Journal of British Studies, 39, 1, 2000, pp. 34-70; P. Lake, The Boxmaker’s revenge. ‘Orthodoxy’, Heteredoxy’ and the Politcs of the Parish in early Stuart London, Stanford U.P., 2001. I regret that I have still not been able to read D. Como, Blown by the Spirit. Puritanism and the emergence of an Antinomian Underground in Pre-Civil-War England, Stanford U.P., 2004.

[35] P. Lake, D. Como, “Orthodoxy” and Its Discontents, cit., p. 66.

[36] J. Morrill, Christopher Hill’s Revolution, in Id., The Nature of the English Revolution, cit. p. 281.

[37] J. Morrill, Introduction: Britain’s revolutions, ibid., p. 249. Emphasis added.

[38] T. Harris, The Politics of the Excluded, Basingstoke, Palgrave, 2001, pp. 21-25.

[39] A. Hughes, Gangraena and the English Revolution, Oxford U.P., 2004, esp. pp. 409-415.

[40] A. Wood, Riot, Rebellion, and popular Politics in Early modern England, Basingstoke, Palgrave, 2002, pp. 145-171; T. Harris, The Leveller Legacy: from the Restoration to the Exclusion Crisis, in M. Mendle (ed.), The Putney Debate, Cambridge U.P., 2001, pp. 219-240.

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