Stuart Era

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Stuart Era’

43
Long Ben Clay Lane

An English sailor became the target of the first worldwide manhunt following an audacious act of piracy.

From 1688 to 1697, William III’s England and Louis XIV’s France were locked in the Nine Years’ War. Louis took the dispute to England’s colonies in North America, the Caribbean, and even India, but the French fleet was not the only peril upon the high seas.

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44
The Nine Years’ War Clay Lane

King Louis XIV of France raised rebellion in Ireland to put his own man on the English throne.

Throughout the 1680s, King Louis XIV of France nibbled away at countries along the French border from Holland to the Alps, while his ally Turkey harassed them from the other side. Only William, Stadtholder of the Dutch Republic, offered any real resistance, but his navy was too small do anything about it until 1688, when an extraordinary stroke of luck came his way.

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45
The Darien Scheme Clay Lane

The Parliament of Scotland tried to liberate itself from London’s strangling single market.

‘Protectionism’ means stifling competition and imports to safeguard domestic industry and so tax revenue. Most European governments were guilty of it in the seventeenth century (they still are) and the Scots were feeling the pinch of it.

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46
The Voyage of the ‘Mayflower’ Clay Lane

A crackdown on dissent in England’s established Church drove a band of Nottinghamshire townspeople to seek new shores.

‘Mayflower’ was the ship taken by just over a hundred settlers in 1620, hoping to make a new life in England’s American colony of Virginia. Most were economic migrants, domestic servants or merchants, but those who emerged as leaders were Christians from the little village of Scrooby in Nottinghamshire.

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47
At a Solemn Musick John Milton

John Milton shows his appreciation for noble words and music in uplifting harmony.

Milton’s celebration of noble poetry set to music, which he presents as an echo of the music of heaven itself, is couched in terms of the Sirens of Greek mythology, two mysterious winged women hidden in cliff-tops whose enchanting song drew sailors irresistibly.

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48
The Winter Queen Clay Lane

Conspiracies and dynastic expectations swirled around James I’s daughter from the age of nine.

When King James VI of Scotland became King James I of England in 1603, he brought his family to London, including a seven-year-old daughter named Elizabeth. Just two years later, she was the unwitting focus of a traitorous plot to assassinate her father and put England back under the dominion of Continental Europe.

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