Read Rebellion: The History of England from James I to the Glorious Revolution Online
Authors: Peter Ackroyd
Parliament Scout
Partridge, John:
Calendarium Judaicum
party politics: beginnings
Peacemaker, The
Peacham, Henry:
The Complete Gentleman
Pelham, Sir William
Pembroke, Philip Herbert, 4th earl of
Pembroke, William Herbert, 3rd earl of
Penn, Admiral William
Pennington, Vice-Admiral Sir John
Pepys, Elizabeth
Pepys, Roger
Pepys, Samuel: on posthumous praise for Cromwell; describes Monck; on popular oath; on reintroduction of maypole; on folly of marrying pregnant women; on rainstorm after Charles II’s coronation; deplores power of bishops; on Charles II’s mistresses; on Sedley’s outrageous behaviour; diary descriptions; on Great Plague; and national shortage of money; on fall of Clarendon; on popular mistrust of Charles II; on
École des Filles
; develops navy
Percy, Thomas
‘Petitioners, the’
Petre, Edward, SJ
Phelips, Sir Robert
Philip III, king of Spain
Philip IV, king of Spain
Pickering, Sir Gilbert
plague: (1603); (1626); London (1685)
Player, Sir Thomas
poll tax: introduced
poor, the: increase in numbers; welfare under Charles I
Popish Plot (1678)
portents and prognostications
Porter, Endymion
Portland, Richard Weston, 1st earl of
Portsmouth, Louise de Kérouaille, duchess of
Portugal: and marriage of Catherine of Braganza to Charles II
Pory, John
preaching: style; as distributor of news
predestination: as doctrine
Presbyterians: James I’s hostility to; Charles I’s concessions to; at Westminster Assembly; differences with Independents; earl of Manchester embraces; suppress printing; Charles I negotiates with; on Church rule; plan disbandment of New Model Army; eleven members charged; hostility to army; excluded from parliament by Pride; Charles II promises support to; in Cavalier Parliament; adapt to Charles II’s regime; prepare for separate church;
see also
Church of Scotland
press: controlled;
see also
books; printing
Preston, battle of (1648)
Pride, Colonel Thomas: ‘purge’; raids bear-garden
print shops and boo
ksellers
printing: suppressed (1643)
Privy Council: legislative powers; reformed
professions
prostitution: in London
Protestant Union
Protestantism: James I embraces; and Bohemian crisis; divisions; persecuted in Europe; under threat in France; in Thirty Years War; Louis XIII grants freedom of worship; and Popish Plot;
see also
Huguenots
Providence Island Company
Prynne, William: puritanism; charged, sentenced and ears cut off; satirizes Eucharistic rites; prosecuted and punished with Bastwick; released and returns to London;
Histriomastix
purge: as word
puritans: present millenary petition to James I; religious beliefs and practices; ordered to conform to Book of Common Prayer; under Charles I; anti-Laudian reaction; women and; clergy removed from livings (1662)
Putney: Fairfax sets up HQ at; debates (1647)
Pye, Sir Robert
Pym, John: speaks against Catholic threat; on parliamentary authority in religion; supports Scots against Charles; supports Providence Island Company; petitions Charles to make peace with Scots; leads ‘Protestant Cause’; speaks in parliament; Strafford threatens; accusations against Strafford; passes ‘root and branch’ petition; reforms; as chancellor of exchequer; speeches published; ten propositions; alarmed at Charles’ proposed visit to Scotland; as ‘King Pym’ and mastery in parliament; pledges to suppress Irish rebellion; and ‘Grand Remonstrance’; blames Charles for Irish rebellion; prepares for war at home; supports mob against bishops; character and appearance; impeachment charges against; locks doors of Commons chamber; fear of traitor’s death; raises money in civil war; rejects Essex’s proposed truce offer to Charles I; death
Quakers
Radcliffe, Sir George
Rainsborough, Thomas
Raleigh, Lady
Raleigh, Sir Walter: suspected of conspiracy; forfeits Sherborne; Prince Henry admires; sails for Guiana; executed
Ranke, Leopold von
Ranters (religious)
religion: divisions and controversies; Westminster Assembly proposes reform; enthusiasts and radicals; under Cromwell and commonwealth; under Charles II; Charles II’s declaration of indulgence on; proliferation of sects under Charles II;
see also
Catholics; Protestantism
Reresby, Sir John
Reynolds, John
Rhé (island, France)
Rich, Frances (
née
Cromwell; Oliver’s daughter)
Rich, Sir Nathaniel
Rich, Robert
Richelieu, Cardinal Armand Jean Duplessis, duc de
Ripon
Rochester, John Wilmot, 2nd earl of
Roe, Sir Thomas
Rogers, Thorold
‘root and branch’ party
Rossingham, Edward
roundheads: as term; army strength; desecrate churches; weapons and equipment
Roundway Down, battle of (1643)
Rous, Francis
Rous, John
Royal Africa Company
Royal Charles
(ship)
royal forests: limited
Royal Society: Bacon’s influence on; formed; Newton and; and economic improvements
royalists: pamphlets; forces muster (1642); supporters; wartime strategy; final defeats; protest at Charles I’s execution; conspiracies in London; in Cavalier Parliament (1661);
see also
cavaliers
Rubens, Peter Paul
‘Rump Parliament’,
see under
Parliament
Rupert, Prince, Count Palatine of the Rhine: commands cavalry in civil war; plunder in war; in Oxford; moves to Bristol; defeated at Marston Moor; at Naseby; surrenders Bristol; Charles I dismisses; cavalry raids from Oxford; commands fleet under Charles II
Rushworth, John
Russell, William, Lord
Rye House Plot (1683)
Sagredo, Giovanni
St John, Elizabeth
St John, Oliver
St Kitts: French occupy
St Martin (citadel, France)
St Paul’s Cathedral (old): as meeting centre; crowd destroys altar
St Winifred: shrine
Salisbury, Robert Cecil, 1st earl of (
earlier
viscount Cranborne): and accession of James I; office under James I; informed of Gunpowder Plot; and taxation measures; and ‘great contract’; on national financial difficulties; death
Sancroft, William, archbishop of Canterbury
Sandwich, Edward Mountague, 1st earl of
Sandys, Sir Edwin
Saye, William Fiennes, 1st viscount
science: and Royal Society
Scotland: James I visits (1617); Charles I’s relations with; opposes Charles I’s religious orders; national covenant; prepares for war against Charles I (1639); preparations for second war and advance into England (1640); negotiates with Charles I; English parliament votes £300,000 to; Charles I visits (1641); solemn league and covenant with England; volunteers support parliamentary cause in England; readiness to negotiate with Charles I; Charles I surrenders to; returns Charles I to parliament for cash; and Charles I in Isle of Wight; ‘Engagement’ with Charles; in second civil war; proclaims Charles II king; invites Charles II to visit; Cromwell’s campaign in (1650); Monck in; ordinance incorporating into commonwealth;
see also
Edinburgh
Scottish Church
see
Church of Scotland
Scroggs, William
Scrope, Philadelphia, Lady (
née
Carey)
Sealed Knot (royalist conspiratorial group)
Sedgemoor, battle of (1685)
Sedley, Sir Charles
self-denying ordinance
Seller, Abednego:
The History of Passive Obedience
sermons; published
seven bishops: consigned to Tower and acquitted
Sexby, Edward
Seymour, Sir Francis
Seymour, William
Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st earl of: Charles II attacks; as senior councillor; as controversial figure; supports royal prerogative; on duke of York’s undependability; dismissed by Charles II; opposes Danby; urges dissolution of Cavalier Parliament; followers; objects to long suspension of parliament; sent to Tower; as champion of Protestantism; proposes dismissal of duke of York from king’s council; on election of ‘courtiers’ to parliament; appointed lord president; on Charles II’s proroguing parliament (1679); opposes James II’s accession, 4435; presents Charles II with petition for sitting of parliament; attempts prosecution of duke of York and Duchess of Portsmouth; takes refuge and dies in Holland; ‘Letter from a Person of Quality’
Shakespeare, William;
The Tempest
;
The Winter’s Tale
Sharp, James, archbishop of St Andrews
Sheffield: poverty
Sheldon, Gilbert, archbishop of Canterbury
Shelley, Percy Bysshe
Sherland, Anthony
ship-money (tax)
Shirley, James
‘Short Parliament’,
see under
Parliament
Shrewsbury, Charles Talbot, 12th earl (
later
duke) of
Shrewsbury, Gilbert Talbot, 7th earl of
Sidney, Algernon
silver: minted in England for Antwerp
Sindercombe, Miles
slaves: in Pepys’s London
Slingsby, Sir Henry
soap: manufacturing monopoly
Sole Bay, battle of (1672)
solemn league and covenant; burned
Somerset, Frances Howard, countess of (
earlier
countess of Essex)
Somerset, Robert Carr, 1st earl of (
earlier
viscount Rochester): as James I’s favourite; Prince Henry disparages; infatuation with and marriage to Frances Howard; and Overbury murder; breach with James I; as lord chamberlain; draws up self-pardon; trial
Southampton, Thomas Wriothesley, 4th earl of
Spain: peace with England; marriage arrangements for Charles I; Raleigh attacks on Orinoco; and Bohemian crisis; popular hostility to; Prince Charles visits with Buckingham; prospective war with; war with England (1625); secret treaty with England (1634); fleet in English Channel (1639); Cromwell considers alliance with; declares war on England (1655); defeated at battle of the dunes (1658)
sports: controlled under James I
Spottiswoode, John, archbishop of St Andrews
Sprat, Thomas
stagecoaches
Stamford, Henry Grey, 1st earl of
Star Chamber; abolished
Stewart, Frances
‘stillborn parliament’,
see under
Parliament
‘stop, the’
Stourbridge Fair
Strafford, Sir Thomas Wentworth, 1st earl of: opposes illegal imprisonment; titles; as lord president of north and lord deputy of Ireland; and ‘Thorough’ (regime); letters from Laud; and Scottish defiance; returns from Ireland to advise Charles I; unpopularity; and invading Scots army (1640); Commons issue grievances against; joins Charles in London; threatens Pym and Hampden; accused of high treason; trial; Bill of Attainder against; demands for death; executed
Strode, William
Stuart, Lady Arabella
Stuart dynasty: ends (1688)
Stukeley, William
Suckling, Sir John
Suffolk, Thomas Howard, 1st earl of
Sweden: England proposes holy crusade against Catholic powers; under Gustavus Adolphus; in Triple Alliance (1668)
syphilis: spread from Naples
Tate, Zouch
taxation: under James I; under Charles I; after Charles I’s death; under Cromwell; under Charles II;
see also
excise; ship-money; tonnage and poundage
tea
Temple, Sir William;
Memoirs