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Edmund Burke and the First Stuart Revolution

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Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Abstract

jats:titleAbstract</jats:title>jats:pThis essay reconsiders the character and significance of Edmund Burke's attitude to the seventeenth-century civil wars and interregnum. Burke may have venerated the “revolution principles” of 1688–89 over those of the 1640s, not least in thejats:italicReflections on the Revolution in France</jats:italic>in which he notoriously compares English dissenting radicals to regicidal Puritans. Yet his response to the first Stuart revolution is more complex than has commonly been allowed and is closely bound up with Burke's earlier parliamentary career as a prominent member of the Rockingham Whig connection. The revival of an anti-Stuart idiom within the extra-parliamentary opposition of the 1760s, together with the mounting conflict with the North American colonies, gave renewed prominence to the memory of the civil wars within English political discourse. The Rockinghamites attempted to exploit this development—without compromising their own, more conservative reading of seventeenth-century history—but they were also its victims. In the years that followed, Burke and his colleagues were repeatedly identified by their political opponents with the spirit of Puritan rebellion and Cromwellian usurpation. These circumstances provide a new perspective on Burke's interpretation of the nation's revolutionary past; they also offer important insights into his writings and speeches in response to the French Revolution.</jats:p>

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Keywords

Irish literature, 1700-1799, Burke, Edmund(1729-1797), 0000 0001 2145 0834, prose, <i>Reflections on the Revolution in France</i>(1790), French Revolution, English Civil War, Commonwealth and Protectorate (Great Britain)

Journal Title

JOURNAL OF BRITISH STUDIES

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Journal ISSN

0021-9371
1545-6986

Volume Title

59

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)