A NOVEL STUDY OF THE POLITICAL, RELIGIOUS, AND CULTURAL WORLDS OF THE
PRINCIPAL IRISH FIGURES AT THE EXILED COURT OF CHARLES II
Shortlisted for the Royal Historical Society's Whitfield Prize, 2014
King Charles I's execution in January 1649 marked a moment of
deliverance for the victors in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, but for
thousands of Royalists it signaled the onset of more than a decade of
penury and disillusionment in exile. Driven by an enduring allegiance
to the Stuart dynasty, now personified in the young King Charles II,
Royalists took up residence among thecourts, armies, and cities of
Continental Europe, clinging to hopes of restoration and the solace of
their companions as the need to survive threatened to erode the
foundations of their beliefs.
_The King's Irishmen_ vividly illustrates the experience of these
exiles during the course of the 1650s, revealing complex issues of
identity and allegiance often obscured by the shadow of the Civil
Wars. Drawing on sources from across Britain, Ireland, and Continental
Europe, it looks at key Irish figures and networks in Charles II's
court-in-exile in order to examine broader themes of memory, belief,
honour, identity, community, dislocation and disillusionment. Each
chapter builds upon and challenges recent historical interest in
royalism, providing new insights into the ways in which allegiances
and identities were re-fashioned and re-evaluated as the exiles moved
across Europe in pursuit of aid. _TheKing's Irishmen_ offers not only
a vital reappraisal of the nature of royalism within its Irish and
European dimensions but also the nature of 'Irishness' and early
modern community at large.
MARK WILLIAMS is Lecturer in Early Modern History at Cardiff
University.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781782043089
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Boydell Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter