{"title":"Elizabethan chroniclers and parliament","authors":"I. Archer","doi":"10.7228/MANCHESTER/9780719099588.003.0006","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Chronicles remained the dominant form of historical writing throughout the sixteenth century, and contained much material about the relationship of parliament and the crown and the wider political community. But how coherent a view of parliament could be derived from the chronicles? That is the question addressed by this essay, primarily through Holinshed, but with reference to the other chronicles on which his account was built. Holinshed included some key texts on parliament, including William Harrison’s reworking of Sir Thomas Smith’s account in De republica Anglorum (1583), significantly enhancing parliament’s role on the succession and church reform, and John Hooker’s Order and Usage (1572), inserted into the Irish section. But Holinshed famously left his chronicles open to variant readings. There was little interest in parliament’s institutional development, or commonwealth legislation, but much more interest in parliament as the bringer of hated taxes, and in the politics of parliaments, particularly relating to monarchical succession. It is argued that readers might take away various understandings from the chronicles, but that in any case the chronicles tended to focus less on institutional structures than on the moral qualities of the country’s leaders who operated them.","PeriodicalId":207891,"journal":{"name":"Writing the history of parliament in Tudor and early Stuart England","volume":"59 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-07-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Writing the history of parliament in Tudor and early Stuart England","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.7228/MANCHESTER/9780719099588.003.0006","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Chronicles remained the dominant form of historical writing throughout the sixteenth century, and contained much material about the relationship of parliament and the crown and the wider political community. But how coherent a view of parliament could be derived from the chronicles? That is the question addressed by this essay, primarily through Holinshed, but with reference to the other chronicles on which his account was built. Holinshed included some key texts on parliament, including William Harrison’s reworking of Sir Thomas Smith’s account in De republica Anglorum (1583), significantly enhancing parliament’s role on the succession and church reform, and John Hooker’s Order and Usage (1572), inserted into the Irish section. But Holinshed famously left his chronicles open to variant readings. There was little interest in parliament’s institutional development, or commonwealth legislation, but much more interest in parliament as the bringer of hated taxes, and in the politics of parliaments, particularly relating to monarchical succession. It is argued that readers might take away various understandings from the chronicles, but that in any case the chronicles tended to focus less on institutional structures than on the moral qualities of the country’s leaders who operated them.
在整个16世纪,编年史一直是历史写作的主要形式,其中包含了很多关于议会与国王以及更广泛政治团体关系的材料。但从编年史中得出的议会观点又有多连贯呢?这就是本文要解决的问题,主要是通过霍林什德,但也参考了他的叙述所依据的其他编年史。霍林什德收录了一些关于议会的关键文本,包括威廉·哈里森(William Harrison)对托马斯·史密斯爵士(Sir Thomas Smith)在《论盎格鲁共和国》(De republica Anglorum, 1583)中的记述进行的修改,显著提升了议会在王位继承和教会改革中的作用,以及约翰·胡克(John Hooker)在爱尔兰部分插入的《秩序与用法》(Order and Usage, 1572)。但霍林希德让他的编年史有不同的解读,这是出了名的。他们对议会的制度发展或联邦立法不感兴趣,但对议会带来令人讨厌的税收和议会政治,特别是与君主继承有关的政治,更感兴趣。有人认为,读者可能会从编年史中获得不同的理解,但无论如何,编年史倾向于关注管理这些机构的国家领导人的道德品质,而不是制度结构。