Soldiers and Statesmen: The General Council of the Army and Its Debates, 1647-1648



Soldiers and Statesmen: The General Council of the Army and Its Debates, 1647-1648
Soldiers and Statesmen is a book about the General Council of the Army, which was a group of soldiers that elected "agitators" to speak for them. The agitators were trying to get the generals to change the way the government was run, and they thought that the king would listen to them more if he was elected by the soldiers. If the king had listened to the agitators, he would have been able to stay... more details
Key Features:
  • The book discusses the General Council of the Army, which was a group of soldiers that elected "agitators" to speak for them.
  • The agitators were trying to get the generals to change the way the government was run, and they thought that the king would listen to them more if he was elected by the soldiers.
  • If the king had listened to the agitators, he would have been able to stay on the throne, because the army was very powerful.


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Features
Author Austin Woolrych
Format Hardcover
ISBN 9780198227526
Publisher Oxford University Press, Usa
Manufacturer Oxford University Press, Usa
Description
Soldiers and Statesmen is a book about the General Council of the Army, which was a group of soldiers that elected "agitators" to speak for them. The agitators were trying to get the generals to change the way the government was run, and they thought that the king would listen to them more if he was elected by the soldiers. If the king had listened to the agitators, he would have been able to stay on the throne, because the army was very powerful.

Within a year of its victory over King Charles I in 1646, the New Model Army became a powerful force in English politics when it defied Parliament's orders to disband and set up its own democratic institution, the General Council of the Army. Its soldiers elected "agitators" as their spokesmen, who met with the generals to discuss not only the grievances of the army but also the settlement of the kingdom--contesting the very foundations of political authority. Shedding new light on the origins and proceedings of the agitators, Soldiers and Statesmen offers a reinterpretation of a critical turning point in the Great Rebellion, and suggests that the army which eventually brought the king to the scaffold would have restored him to his throne if he had given more weight to its offers.

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