Careers and Crises in the Age of Charles I
Examines a selection of Charles I's people, exploring their aspirations and discontents, their engagement with kindred and colleagues, and central authority, in an age they recognized as 'troubled'.


This book examines the lives and circumstances of a variety of English men and women in the decades before the English Civil War, and follows some of them to the Restoration. It introduces a selection of Charles I's people, some of them previously undocumented, and explores their aspirations and discontents, their engagement with their kindred, their colleagues and central authority. These were members of the clerical, professional and commercial classes or from the minor gentry and aristocratic fringe - the backbone of the political nation - engaged, in various ways, with military, governmental, ecclesiastical or commercial affairs.

Most feature little in previous historical studies, but key moments in their lives are reconstructed here from scattered references or rare collections. They are shown negotiating the shoals of ambition and opportunity, kinship and patronage, religious anxiety and personal distress, in an age they recognized as 'troubled'. Preoccupied by their own careers and comforts, and driven by personal anxieties and ambitions, Charles I's subjects coped with the pressures of public occurrences and the business of church and state. In that regard they shared some stresses with our own age, though theirs eventuated in civil war and revolution.
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Careers and Crises in the Age of Charles I
Examines a selection of Charles I's people, exploring their aspirations and discontents, their engagement with kindred and colleagues, and central authority, in an age they recognized as 'troubled'.


This book examines the lives and circumstances of a variety of English men and women in the decades before the English Civil War, and follows some of them to the Restoration. It introduces a selection of Charles I's people, some of them previously undocumented, and explores their aspirations and discontents, their engagement with their kindred, their colleagues and central authority. These were members of the clerical, professional and commercial classes or from the minor gentry and aristocratic fringe - the backbone of the political nation - engaged, in various ways, with military, governmental, ecclesiastical or commercial affairs.

Most feature little in previous historical studies, but key moments in their lives are reconstructed here from scattered references or rare collections. They are shown negotiating the shoals of ambition and opportunity, kinship and patronage, religious anxiety and personal distress, in an age they recognized as 'troubled'. Preoccupied by their own careers and comforts, and driven by personal anxieties and ambitions, Charles I's subjects coped with the pressures of public occurrences and the business of church and state. In that regard they shared some stresses with our own age, though theirs eventuated in civil war and revolution.
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Careers and Crises in the Age of Charles I

Careers and Crises in the Age of Charles I

by David Cressy
Careers and Crises in the Age of Charles I

Careers and Crises in the Age of Charles I

by David Cressy

Hardcover

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Overview

Examines a selection of Charles I's people, exploring their aspirations and discontents, their engagement with kindred and colleagues, and central authority, in an age they recognized as 'troubled'.


This book examines the lives and circumstances of a variety of English men and women in the decades before the English Civil War, and follows some of them to the Restoration. It introduces a selection of Charles I's people, some of them previously undocumented, and explores their aspirations and discontents, their engagement with their kindred, their colleagues and central authority. These were members of the clerical, professional and commercial classes or from the minor gentry and aristocratic fringe - the backbone of the political nation - engaged, in various ways, with military, governmental, ecclesiastical or commercial affairs.

Most feature little in previous historical studies, but key moments in their lives are reconstructed here from scattered references or rare collections. They are shown negotiating the shoals of ambition and opportunity, kinship and patronage, religious anxiety and personal distress, in an age they recognized as 'troubled'. Preoccupied by their own careers and comforts, and driven by personal anxieties and ambitions, Charles I's subjects coped with the pressures of public occurrences and the business of church and state. In that regard they shared some stresses with our own age, though theirs eventuated in civil war and revolution.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781837652914
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer, Limited
Publication date: 11/18/2025
Pages: 310
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.00(d)

About the Author

DAVID CRESSY is George III Professor of British History emeritus, The Ohio State University. He is one of the leading early modernists of his generation and the author of fifteen books.

Table of Contents

Contents
Conventions and Abbreviations

Introduction
1. Sir John Ogle and the End of Ambition: A Commander Retires from the Field
2. Captain Pennington's Perplexity: Honour and Duty at Sea
3. Hugh Pyne and John Poulet: Dangerous Words and Aristocratic Ambitions
4. Alexander Leighton's Troubles: Mutilation, Imprisonment, and Episcopacy
5. Peter Smart and John Cosin: The Beauty of Holiness and its Detractors
6. Lady Eleanor's Kettle of Filth: Prophecy and Desecration in England's Babylon
7. Judith Calley's Collared Brawn: Country, Court, and the Spanish Connection
8. William Morton's Barren Fruit: A Godly Lecturer's Career and Contacts
9. Henry Butts and the Frown of a King: The Death of a Vice-Chancellor
10. Thomas Harrison's Loyal Heart: The Price of Crying Treason
11. Thomas Bushell's Remarkable Rocks: A Projector in Peace and War
12. Nicholas Crispe and the Gold of Africa: Tycoon, Slaver, and Spy
Conclusion: Troubled People in Troubled Times
Bibliography
Index
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