Robert Stewart on Michael Braddick's account of the English Civil War
In July, 1642, as the English House of Commons debated whether to raise an army against the king, a dismayed MP, Bulstrode Whitelocke, wondered how parliament had
'insensibly slipped into this beginning of a civil war by one unexpected accident after another [so that] we scarce know how, but from paper combats, by declarations, remonstrances, protestations, votes, messages, answers and replies we are now come to the question of raising forces.'
Religion was the key and, after an opening chapter which as a summary of the complex, nuanced meanings of the words ‘Reformation’ and ‘Protestantism’ could scarcely be bettered, Braddick does not let us forget it. One effect of the Reformation, and the spectrum of Christian species that it spawned, was to change European conflicts by raising ideological and national quarrels above dynastic ones. The English civil war coincided with the Thirty Years War on the continent. Underlying both was the same disturbing question, ‘whether,’ as John Knox had asked in 1544, ‘obedience is to be rendered to a magistrate who enforces idolatry and condemns true religion’. Even if the answer were ‘no’, there remained a more perplexing question. Who was to judge when magistrates were miscreant? The Scotch Presbyterian Covenanters were undaunted by the question. When, in 1637, Charles tried to impose the English Prayer Book upon the Calvinist Kirk, they rose in revolt and from that moment the spectre of war haunted England.
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