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Our First Revolution: The Remarkable British Upheaval That Inspired America's Founding Fathers [NOOK Book]
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In this exciting work of popular history, Michael Barone brings the story of the Glorious Revolution–an unlikely late-seventeenth-century British uprising–to American readers and reveals that, without it, the American Revolution may never have happened. With a strong narrative drive and unforgettable portraits of kings, queens, and soldiers, Barone takes an episode that has fallen into unjustified obscurity and restores it to the prominence it deserves.
Political journalist and historian Barone (Hard America, Soft America) elucidates the template for America's independence movement in this well-written history of its forerunner: England's Glorious Revolution of 1688. The author describes the origins of the revolution, a mostly bloodless change of government, as a mixture of religious, political and diplomatic factors. King James II's Roman Catholicism, hostility to Parliament, and French sympathies alienated an increasing number of his powerful subjects including John Churchill, later Duke of Marlborough, who invited Dutch Stadtholder William of Orange and his wife, Mary, James's sister, to intervene. Among the revolution's consequences was a Bill of Rights that limited the monarch's powers and strengthened representative government. A Toleration Act encouraged variant forms of Protestant worship. The creation of a funded national debt and the foundation of the Bank of England laid the groundwork for financial development. Involvement in the long series of wars with France moved England from a country standing apart from Europe to one that took responsibility for maintaining a continental balance of power. It was a Glorious Revolution indeed that laid the political groundwork for the world in which we now live, and Barone's lucid work honors its heritage. (May 8)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationMany Protestants in England were concerned when Charles II, a ruler with Catholic sympathies, was returned to the throne in 1660 after the Cromwell Protectorate ended. After his death, when the openly Catholic James II came to power, they petitioned the Dutch Prince William of Orange to invade and rule in James's place. Barone (senior editor, U.S. News & World Report; Hard America, Soft America) describes how the so-called Glorious or Bloodless Revolution of 1688 helped transform Britain from an absolutist regime to a constitutional one in which the power of the king was substantially reduced. This revolution reorganized England into a country ruled by law rather than the monarch's whim and one in which religion was a matter of choice rather than of political or military conflict. Barone concludes that America's Founding Fathers saw that the rights gained by Englishmen in that revolution were not being granted to them. A skillful account of liberties on both sides of the Atlantic; recommended for public libraries and large British history collections.
—Robert Harbison
Excerpted from Our First Revolution by Michael Barone Copyright © 2007 by Michael Barone. Excerpted by permission.
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Posted November 17, 2009
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Posted June 30, 2011
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Posted October 2, 2010
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Overview
In this exciting work of popular history, Michael Barone brings the story of the Glorious Revolution–an unlikely late-seventeenth-century British uprising–to American readers and reveals that, without it, the American Revolution may never have happened. With a strong narrative drive and unforgettable portraits of kings, queens, and soldiers, Barone takes an episode that has fallen into unjustified obscurity and restores it to the prominence it deserves.