Central Government and the Localities
This book is a study of centre-local interaction, based upon the experience of the people of an English county, during a very turbulent period in their history. The work revolves around: the relationship between centre and locality, and the partisan use of local institutions and sentiment for 'national' ends. Dr Coleby combines administrative and political history, and establishes with unusual rigour and clarity the nature of the late-seventeenth-century English polity. Whilst there have been many county studies of the early Stuart and Civil War periods, few accounts hitherto have looked at the situation both before and after the restoration of Charles II in 1660. Dr Coleby argues for the continuity of governmental concerns throughout the later seventeenth century, and challenges received wisdom about the relative local efficiency of Interregnum and Restoration regimes.
Product details
July 2002Paperback
9780521890847
288 pages
230 × 154 × 23 mm
0.468kg
Available
Table of Contents
- List of maps
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction and prologue
- Part I. The Interregnum:
- 1. Local office-holding 1649–60
- 2. The enforcement of policy 1649–60
- 3. Government and county 1649–60
- Part II. The Restoration:
- 4. Local office-holding 1660–78
- 5. The enforcement of policy 1660–78
- 6. Court and county 1660–78
- Part III. From the Popish Plot to the Revolution of 1688:
- 7. Local office-holding 1679–88
- 8. The enforcement of policy 1679–88
- 9. Court and county 1679–88
- Epilogue and conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index.