{"id":7468,"date":"2018-02-25T19:48:00","date_gmt":"2018-02-25T19:48:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2020-09-25T02:11:15","modified_gmt":"2020-09-25T02:11:15","slug":"the-history-of-england-can-be-defined","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rubyskynews.com\/index.php\/2018\/02\/25\/the-history-of-england-can-be-defined\/","title":{"rendered":"The history of England can be defined as the gradual process of Parliament asserting its authority over the monarchy"},"content":{"rendered":"<div style=\"margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px;\" class=\"sharethis-inline-share-buttons\" ><\/div><h1 style=\"background-color: #f9f9f9; color: #333333; font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; margin: 0px; padding: 0px;\">The history of England can be defined as the gradual process of Parliament asserting its authority over the monarchy<\/h1>\n<pre style=\"background-color: #f9f9f9; color: #333333; font-size: 12px; padding-left: 18px;\">For: ESLG 3150 course<br \/>Topic: The history of England can be defined as the gradual process of<br \/>Parliament asserting its authority over the monarchy.<br \/>Term: Spring I, 2000<br \/><br \/>      The political history of British Isles over the  past  800  years  has<br \/>been largely one of reducing the power  of  the  monarchy  and  transferring<br \/>authority to a London-based Parliament as  the  sovereign  legislative  body<br \/>for all of Britain. This development has resulted in political,  social  and<br \/>religious conflicts, as well as  evolving  governmental  and  constitutional<br \/>institutions.<br \/>      The early political history of the British Isles is the story of  four<br \/>independent  countries  (England,  Scotland,  Wales  and  Ireland),  but   a<br \/>dominant English political and  military  expansionism  over  the  centuries<br \/>resulted in a united country (United Kingdom).<br \/>      The last England\u2019s invader Duke William promptly set out to  establish<br \/>firm control over his English kingdom.  He  reorganized  the  government  by<br \/>making the old Saxon witan into a \u201cGreat Council\u201d, which included the  great<br \/>lords of the realm and met  regularly  under  William\u2019s  direction,  and  by<br \/>establishing Curia Regis, a permanent council of royal advisers.<br \/>      William\u2019s youngest son Henry I ruled the  country  for  35  years  and<br \/>during his reign he won the support of  barons  by  singing  a  \u201cCharter  of<br \/>Liberties\u201d,  which  listed   and   guarantees   their   rights   (individual<br \/>liberties).<br \/>      Early English monarchs had considerable power, but generally  accepted<br \/>advice and some  limitations  on  their  authority.  Powerful  French-Norman<br \/>barons opposed King John\u2019s dictatorial rule by forcing  him  to  sign  Magna<br \/>Carta in 1215. This document protected the feudal  aristocracy  rather  then<br \/>the ordinary citizen, but it  came  to  be  regarded  as  a  cornerstone  of<br \/>British liberties. It restricted the monarch\u2019s powers; forced  him  to  take<br \/>advice; increased the influence of the aristocracy; and stipulated  that  no<br \/>citizen could be punished or kept in prison without a fair trail.<br \/>      Such  developments  encouraged  the  establishment  of   parliamentary<br \/>structures. In 1265, Simon de Montfort called nobles and non-aristocrats  to<br \/>form a Council or Parliament to win  the  support  of  people.  To  it  were<br \/>invited not only the great barons and clergy, but  also  representatives  of<br \/>the knights of shires and from the towns. This initiative  was  followed  in<br \/>1295  by  the  Model  Parliament  (because  it  served  a  model  for  later<br \/>Parliaments) of  Edward  I,  which  was  the  first  representative  English<br \/>Parliament.  Its  two  sections  consisted  of  the  bishops,  barons,   two<br \/>representatives of the knights of each shire and  two  representatives  from<br \/>each important town. In this way Parliament won the \u201cpower  of  the  purse\u201d:<br \/>by refusing to agree to new taxes, it could force kings to do as it  wished.<br \/>As Parliament became more influential it  won  other  rights,  such  as  the<br \/>power of impeach and try royal officials for misbehavior. From here  we  can<br \/>conclude that by the end of Edward\u2019s reign the  peculiarly  English  concept<br \/>of government, in which a strong  king  with  powerful  royal  officials  is<br \/>still limited by the common law and by Parliament, was complete.<br \/>      However, the Parliament was too large to rule the country effectively.<br \/>A Privy Council, comprising the monarch and court advisers, developed.  This<br \/>was the  royal  government  outside  Parliament,  until  it  lost  power  to<br \/>parliamentary  structures  in  the  late  eighteenth  and  early  nineteenth<br \/>centuries.<br \/>      Although parliament now had some limited powers against  the  monarch,<br \/>there was a return to royal dominance in Tudor  England  in  1485.  Monarchs<br \/>controlled Parliament and summoned it when they needed to raise money.<br \/>      Parliament showed more resistance  to  royal  rule  under  the  Stuart<br \/>monarchy from 1603 by using its  weapon  of  financial  control.  Parliament<br \/>began to refuse royal requests for money. It forced Charles I  to  sign  the<br \/>Petition of Rights in 1628, which further restricted  the  monarch\u2019s  powers<br \/>and prevented him from raising taxes without Parliament\u2019s  consent.  Charles<br \/>attempted to arrest parliamentary leaders in the House  of  Commons  itself.<br \/>His failure to do meant that the  monarch  was  in  future  prohibited  from<br \/>entering the Commons. As the result of it civil war broke out in  1642.  The<br \/>Protestant Parliamentarians under O.  Cromwell  won  the  military  struggle<br \/>against the Catholic Royalists.  Charles  was  beheaded  in  1649  and  thee<br \/>monarchy was abolished. But it didn\u2019t last long in 1660  they  restored  the<br \/>Stuart Charles II to the throne. Parliament ended  his  expansive  wars  and<br \/>imposed further restrictions, such as  Habeas  Corpus  Act  in  1679,  which<br \/>stipulated that no citizen could be imprisoned without  a  fair  and  speedy<br \/>trail.<br \/>      In the early and mid sixteenth century country was ruled by King Henry<br \/>VIII (king 1509-1547) who had made  Parliament  his  willing  tool  and  had<br \/>replaced Catholicism with the Church of  England.  Henry  was  succeeded  by<br \/>three of his children (Edward VI, Mary I, Elizabeth I)  in  succession.  But<br \/>only Elizabeth made a great contribution during her reign  (1558-1603).  She<br \/>allowed any form of worship that fit into  the  rather  loose  framework  of<br \/>ideas that Parliament had established for the Church  of  England.  But  she<br \/>would accept none that conflicted with her authority as  the  head  of  that<br \/>church. After the pope  excommunicated  her  in  1570,  she  had  Parliament<br \/>declare that Catholicism was  treason.  Parliament  lost  power  during  her<br \/>reign. It did not meet often, as she needed to ask it levy  taxes  for  her.<br \/>In theory Parliament continued to have all of the powers it had  won  during<br \/>the Middle Ages.<br \/>      The Elizabethan reign later was called \u201cThe English Renaissance\u201d.  And<br \/>this is right. She did a lot to her Kingdom. On of it  was  the  opening  of<br \/>the trade routs to Russia, trade companies like the East India Company,  the<br \/>Muscovy Company and the Virginia Company.<br \/>      The Stuart monarchs who succeeded Elizabeth try to  impose  absolutism<br \/>and to rule by \u201cdivine right\u201d. But the  English  Parliament,  asserting  its<br \/>ancient rights and privileges, challenged them. The result  was  a  struggle<br \/>that lasted through the better part of the seventeenth century,  culminating<br \/>in the victory of Parliament over the kings.  In  the  age  when  absolutism<br \/>triumphed almost everywhere, England  was  the  striking  exception  of  the<br \/>rule. Growing opposition to the Stuarts centered in Parliament. The  Stuarts<br \/>disliked Parliament, but were dependent upon it because only  the  House  of<br \/>Commons had the right to levy taxes. The Stuarts insisted they had  absolute<br \/>authority to follow whatever  policies  they  chose.  The  conflict  between<br \/>Parliament and the king came to a climax under Charles I  (king  1625-1649).<br \/>In 1626 Charles found himself at war with both France and Spain.  Parliament<br \/>refused to grant new taxes until it had had \u201credress of grievances\u201d. Led  by<br \/>Sir John Eliot, the members of Commons finally forced Charles  to  sign  the<br \/>\u201cPetition of  Right\u201d  in  1628.  This  pact  guaranteed  certain  rights  of<br \/>Parliament and of individual Englishmen against their king.<br \/>      The first Parliament of 1640, the so-called  \u201cShort\u201d  Parliament,  mat<br \/>less then a month. But  soon  after  Charles  was  forced  to  call  another<br \/>Parliament, which came to be called the \u201cLong\u201d  Parliament  because  it  met<br \/>off and on for twenty years (1640-1660). In 1641  the  Long  Parliament  set<br \/>out to dominate the government. More important, it passed a series  of  acts<br \/>to make absolute monarchy impossible.<br \/>      From 1642 to 1645 the civil war  broke  in  England.  It  was  between<br \/>Supporters  of  King  Charles   (Cavaliers)  and  the  supporters   of   the<br \/>Parliament  (Roundheads)  under  the   rule   of   Oliver   Cromwell.    The<br \/>\u201cRoundheads\u201d won in this war and the members who remained from the  previous<br \/>Parliament come to be called the \u201cRump\u201d (sitting  part  of  Parliament).  In<br \/>1649 Charles was beheaded and later  Oliver  Cromwell  became  the  King  of<br \/>England. After his death in 1658 his  son  Richard  took  control  over  the<br \/>country. But he was a poor ruler and soon resigned. In  1660  the  surviving<br \/>members of the Long Parliament were  called  back  into  session  to  invite<br \/>Charles Stuart to become King Charles II of England.<br \/>      Charles II had his problems with Parliament, but he was  usually  able<br \/>to surmount them, and he always knew when the time had come to back down.<br \/>      The growing power of Parliament against the monarch in the seventeenth<br \/>century was  reflected  in  the  development  of  more  organized  political<br \/>parties. Two groups (Whigs and Tories) became  dominant,  and  this  feature<br \/>was to characterize future British two-party politics,  in  which  political<br \/>power has shifted between two main parties.  The  Whigs  didn\u2019t  accept  the<br \/>Catholic sympathizer  James  II  as  successor  to  Charles  II  and  wanted<br \/>religious  freedom  for  al  Protestants.  The  Tories  generally  supported<br \/>royalist beliefs, and helped Charles II to secure James\u2019s right  to  succeed<br \/>him.<br \/>        He (James) attempted to rule  without  Parliament  and  ignored  his<br \/>laws. His  manipulations  forced  Tories  to  join  Whigs  in  inviting  the<br \/>Protestant William of Orange to intervene. William  arrived  in  England  in<br \/>1688, James fled to France and William succeeded to the throne as  England\u2019s<br \/>first constitutional monarch. Since no force was  involved,  this  event  is<br \/>called the Bloodless or  Glorious  Revolution.  Royal  powers  were  further<br \/>restricted under  the  Declaration  of  Rights  (1689),  which  strengthened<br \/>Parliament and provided some civil liberties.<br \/>      The Glorious Revolution of  1688  and  the  Bill  of  Rights  of  1689<br \/>established Parliament once and for all as the equal partner  of  the  king.<br \/>This division of power was soon to prove itself a far more  effective  means<br \/>of government than the absolute monarchies of the continent, and it  assured<br \/>that the constitutional development of England would continue.<\/pre>\n<div style=\"margin-top: 0px; margin-bottom: 0px;\" class=\"sharethis-inline-share-buttons\" ><\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The history of England can be defined as the gradual process of Parliament asserting its authority over the monarchy For: ESLG 3150 courseTopic: The history of England can be defined as the gradual process ofParliament asserting its authority over the monarchy.Term: Spring I, 2000 The political history of British Isles over the past 800 years [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"aioseo_notices":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v21.1 - 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