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{{Short description|1660 restoration of the monarchy in the British Isles}} | |||
The '''English Restoration''' or simply '''Restoration''' was an episode in the history of ] beginning in ] when the monarchy was restored under ] after the ]. ]s reopened after having been closed during the protectorship of ], ]ism lost its momentum, and the bawdy ']' became a recognisable genre. | |||
{{Use British English|date=April 2012}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2021}} | |||
{{Infobox historical era | |||
|name = Stuart Restoration | |||
|start = 1660 | |||
|end = 1714 | |||
|image = Charles II of England in Coronation robes.jpg | |||
|alt = Refer to caption | |||
|caption = ] in coronation robes by ] | |||
|before = ] | |||
|including = | |||
|after = ] | |||
|monarch = {{unbulleted list | |||
| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| ] | |||
| ]}} | |||
|leaders = ] | |||
}} | |||
{{Periods in English History}} | |||
The '''Stuart Restoration''' was the reinstatement in May 1660 of the ] in ], ], and ]. It replaced the ], established in January 1649 after the ], with his son ]. | |||
The name ''Restoration'' may apply both to the actual event by which the English monarchy was restored, and to the period immediately following the accession of Charles II. | |||
The term is also used to describe the reign of Charles II (1660–1685), and sometimes that of his younger brother ] (1685–1688). | |||
], which had preceded the Restoration and followed the ], might have continued a little longer if Oliver Cromwell's son, ], who was made ] on his father's death, had been capable of carrying on his father's policies. Richard Cromwell's main weakness was that he did not have the confidence of the army. After seven months the Army removed him and in May 1659 it reinstalled the ]. However, this too was dissolved shortly afterwards, since it acted as though nothing had changed since 1653 and so it could treat the Army how it liked. After the Rump was dissolved in October, there was a real prospect of a total descent into anarchy as the Army's pretence of unity finally dissolved into factions. | |||
==The Protectorate== | |||
It was into this atmosphere that General ], governor of Scotland under the Cromwells, marched south with his army from ]. On ] 1660 in the ] ] made known the conditions of his acceptance of the crown of England. Monck organised the ], which met for the first time on ]. On ] it declared that King Charles II had been the lawful monarch since the execution of Charles I in January 1649. Charles returned from exile on ]. Later in London, on ] (]), he was proclaimed king. He was crowned at Westminster Abbey on ] ]. | |||
After ], ] from 1658 to 1659, ceded power to the ], ] and ] then dominated government for a year. On 20 October 1659, ], the governor of Scotland under the Cromwells, marched south with his army from Scotland to oppose Fleetwood and Lambert. Lambert's army began to desert him, and he returned to London almost alone whilst Monck marched to London unopposed. The Presbyterian members, excluded in ] of 1648, were recalled, and on 24 December the army restored the ].<ref name="EB-108">{{harvnb|Chisholm|1911a|p=108}}.</ref> | |||
The ] convined for the first time on ], ], it would endured for over 17 years until its disolution on ], ]. Like its predecessor parliament, it was overwhelmingly ] and is also known as the Pensionary Parliament for the many pensions it granted to adherents of the King. | |||
Fleetwood was deprived of his command and ordered to appear before Parliament to answer for his conduct. On 3 March 1660, Lambert was sent to the ], from which he escaped a month later. He tried to rekindle the civil war in favour of the ] by issuing a proclamation calling on all supporters of the "]" to rally on the battlefield of Edgehill, but he was recaptured by Colonel ], a participant in the ] of Charles I who hoped to win a pardon by handing Lambert over to the new regime.<ref name=EB-108/> Lambert was incarcerated and died in custody in 1684; Ingoldsby was pardoned.{{sfn|Firth|1892|p=10}} | |||
In the aftermath of his return, the Royalists took belated vengeance on the ]s responsible for the execution of King ]. Thirty one of the fifty nine Commissioners who had signed the death warrant were living. Pardons were offered to those who came over to the monarchy. Those who did not were tried. Nine were found guilty and suffered the fate of being ]. The leading prosecutor at the trial of King Charles I, John Cook, was executed in a similar manner. The bodies of the regicides Cromwell, ] and ] which had been buried in ] were disinterred and hanged drawn and quartered. | |||
{{quote|The restoration was not what George Monck, as an apparent engineer of the Restoration, had intended – if indeed he knew what he intended, for in Clarendon's sardonic words; "the whole machine was infinitely above his strength ... and it is glory enough to his memory that he was instrumental in bringing those things to pass which he had neither wisdom to foresee, nor courage to attempt, nor understanding to contrive".|source=] Great Tew Circle{{cn|date=June 2024}}}} | |||
On ], ] Major-General ] a leader of the ] was the first person to be found guilty of the regicide of Charles I for commanding the guards on the day of the royal execution in ]. He was the first regicide to be hanged, drawn and quartered because he was considered by the new government to still represent a real threat to the re-established order. This threat was realised when on ], ], 50 Fifth Monarchists, headed by a wine-cooper named ], made an effort to attain possession of London in the name of "King Jesus." Most of the fifty were either killed or taken prisoner, and on ] and ], Venner and ten others were hanged, drawn and quartered for high ]. | |||
==Restoration of Charles II== | |||
In general, however, Charles gained a reputation as an easy-going, fun-loving king, and represented a complete contrast to the restrictive rule of Cromwell. He enjoyed horse-racing and was a great patron of the arts and sciences. | |||
] | |||
On 4 April 1660, ] issued the ], in which he made several promises in relation to the reclamation of the crown of England. While he did this, Monck organised the ], which met for the first time on 25 April. On 8 May, it proclaimed that King Charles II had been the lawful monarch since the ] on 30 January 1649.{{sfn|''House of Commons''|1802a}} Historian Tim Harris argues that "Constitutionally, it was as if the last nineteen years had never happened."<ref>{{harvnb|Harris|2005|p=47}}.</ref> | |||
Charles returned from exile, leaving ] on 23 May and landing at ] on 25 May.<ref name="pepysdiary23"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060708122611/http://www.pepysdiary.com/archive/1661/04/23/index.php |date=8 July 2006 }}.</ref> He entered London on 29 May 1660, his 30th birthday. To celebrate His Majesty's Return to his Parliament, 29 May was made a public holiday, popularly known as ].{{sfn|''House of Commons''|1802b}} He was crowned at Westminster Abbey on 23 April 1661.<ref name="pepysdiary23" /> | |||
== The republican new nobility == | |||
The Commonwealth's written constitutions gave to the Lord Protector the King's power to grant titles of honour. Cromwell created over thirty new ]s. These were all declared invalid at the Restoration of Charles II. Many were regranted by the restored King, but being non-hereditary, these titles have long since become extinct. | |||
Some contemporaries described the Restoration as "a divinely ordained miracle". The sudden and unexpected deliverance from political chaos was interpreted as a restoration of the natural and divine order.<ref>{{harvnb|Jones|1978|p=15}}.</ref> The ] convened for the first time on 8 May 1661, and it would endure for over 17 years, finally being dissolved on 24 January 1679. Like its predecessor, it was overwhelmingly ]. It is also known as the Pensionary Parliament for the many pensions it granted to adherents of the King.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Wallace |first=David C. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mkpl2cBZn3gC&dq=It+is+also+known+as+the+Pensionary+Parliament+for+the+many+pensions+it+granted+to+adherents+of+the+King.&pg=PA175 |title=Twenty-Two Turbulent Years 1639–1661 |date=2013|publisher=Fast-Print Publishing |isbn=978-1-78035-660-0 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
Of the twelve Cromwellian ]cies, Charles II regranted half of them. Only two now continue: Sir George Howland Francis Beaumont, 12th baronet, and Sir Richard Thomas Williams-Bulkeley, 14th baronet, are the direct successors of Sir Thomas Beaumont and Sir Griffith Williams. | |||
The leading political figure at the beginning of the Restoration was ]. It was the "skill and wisdom of Clarendon" which had "made the Restoration unconditional".<ref>{{harvnb|Clark|1953|p=3}}.</ref> | |||
Edmund Dunch was created ] Burnell of East Wittenham in ] ], but it was not regranted. The male line failed in ], so no one can lay claim to the title. | |||
Many Royalist exiles returned and were rewarded. ] returned to the service of England, became a member of the ], and was provided with an annuity. ], returned to be the Captain of the King's guard and received a pension. ] returned and was made "]". ], Marquess of Newcastle, returned and was able to regain the greater part of his estates. He was invested in 1666 with the ] (which had been bestowed upon him in 1650), and was advanced to a ] on 16 March 1665.<ref name="EB-470">{{harvnb|Chisholm|1911b|p=470}}.</ref> | |||
The one hereditary ]cy Cromwell created (making Charles Howard Viscount Howard of Morpeth and Baron Gilsland) continues to this day. In ] ] Howard was created Earl of Carlisle, Viscount Howard of Morpeth, and Baron Dacre of Gillesland. The present Earl is a direct descendant of this Cromwellian creation and Restoration recreation. | |||
== |
==England and Wales== | ||
===Commonwealth regicides and rebels=== | |||
*] | |||
{{more citations needed|section|date=May 2018}}<!--many paragraphs are not cited--> | |||
], the first person found guilty of regicide during the Restoration]] | |||
The ], which became law on 29 August 1660, pardoned all past treason against the crown, but specifically excluded ]. Thirty-one of the ] (judges) who had signed the death warrant in 1649 were living. The regicides were hunted down; some escaped but most were found and put on trial. Three escaped to the American colonies. ], secretly harboured Edward Whalley, William Goffe and John Dixwell, and after American independence named streets after them to honour them as forefathers of the American Revolution.{{sfn|Weight|Haggith|2014|pp=18–21}} | |||
In the ensuing trials, twelve were condemned to death. The ] ], the first person found guilty of regicide, who had been the seventeenth of the 59 commissioners to sign the death warrant, was the first regicide to be ] because he was considered by the new government still to represent a real threat to the re-established order. In October 1660, at ] or ], London, ten were publicly hanged, drawn and quartered: Thomas Harrison, ], ], ], ], and ], who had signed the king's death warrant; the preacher ]; ] and ], who commanded the guards at the king's trial and execution; and ], the solicitor who directed the prosecution. The 10 judges who were on the panel but did not sign the death warrant were also convicted.{{sfn|McIntosh|1982|pp=195–216}} | |||
], ], Judge ], and Judge ] were posthumously ] for high treason. Because Parliament is a court, the highest in the land, a ] is a legislative act declaring a person guilty of treason or felony, in contrast to the regular judicial process of trial and conviction. In January 1661, the corpses of Cromwell, Ireton and Bradshaw were exhumed and hanged in chains at ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Dakers |first=Caroline |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_OFaDwAAQBAJ&dq=In+January+1661,+the+corpses+of+Cromwell,+Ireton+and+Bradshaw+were+exhumed+and+hanged+in+chains+at+Tyburn.&pg=PA240 |title=Fonthill Recovered: A Cultural History |date=2018 |publisher=UCL Press |isbn=978-1-78735-047-2 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
In 1661 ], one of the regicides who signed the death warrant of Charles I, was brought back from Holland along with ], friend and lawyer to Cromwell, and ], former constable of the ]. They were all imprisoned in the Tower. From there they were taken to Tyburn and hanged, drawn and quartered on 19 April 1662. A further 19 regicides were imprisoned for life. | |||
] was not in London for the trial of Charles I. At the Restoration, he was found guilty of high treason and remained in custody in ] for the rest of his life. ] served on the ] during the ] even though he refused to take the oath which expressed approbation (approval) of the King's execution. At the Restoration, after much debate in Parliament, he was exempted from the Indemnity and Oblivion Act. In 1662 he was tried for high treason, found guilty and beheaded on ] on 14 June 1662. | |||
===Regrant of certain Commonwealth titles=== | |||
{{Further|Knights, baronets and peers of the Protectorate}} | |||
The ], ]'s written constitutions, gave to the ] the King's power to grant titles of honour. Over 30 new ]s were granted under the Protectorate. These knighthoods ] upon the Restoration of Charles II, but many were regranted by the restored King. | |||
Of the eleven Protectorate ]cies, two had been previously granted by Charles I during the Civil War, but under ] legislation they were not recognised under the Protectorate (hence the Lord Protector's regranting of them). When that legislation passed into oblivion these two baronets were entitled to use the baronetcies granted by Charles I, and Charles II regranted four more. Only one now continues: ], 14th baronet, is the direct successor of Griffith Williams. Of the remaining Protectorate baronets one, ], was granted a knighthood by Charles II. | |||
] was created ] Burnell of East Wittenham in April 1658, but this barony was not regranted. The male line failed in 1719 with the death of his grandson, also ], so no one can lay claim to the title. | |||
The one hereditary ]cy Cromwell created for certain,{{efn|Cromwell had intended to make ] a viscount, but it is not clear if he so before he died.}} (making ] Viscount Howard of Morpeth and Baron Gilsland) continues to this day. In April 1661, Howard was created ], Viscount Howard of Morpeth, and Baron Dacre of Gillesland. The present Earl is a direct descendant of this Cromwellian creation and Restoration recreation. | |||
===Venner rebellion (1661)=== | |||
On 6 January 1661, about 50 ], headed by a wine-cooper named ], tried to gain possession of London in the name of "King Jesus". Most were either killed or taken prisoner; on 19 and 21 January 1661, Venner and 10 others were hanged, drawn and quartered for high ]. | |||
===Church of England settlement=== | |||
The ] was restored as the national Church in England, backed by the ] and the ]. People reportedly "pranced around ] as a way of taunting the Presbyterians and Independents" and "burned copies of the ]".<ref>{{harvnb|Harris|2005|pp=52–53}}.</ref> | |||
==Ireland== | |||
{{main|Restoration (Ireland)}} | |||
"The commonwealth parliamentary union was, after 1660, treated as null and void".{{sfn|EB15|p=1012}} As in England the republic was deemed constitutionally never to have occurred. The Convention Parliament was dissolved by Charles II in January 1661, and he summoned his first parliament in Ireland in May 1661. In 1662, ] was made a public holiday known to this day as Oak Apple Day.{{citation needed|date=May 2017}} | |||
Coote, Broghill and ] were initially the main political figures in the Restoration. ] was given the position of ] but he did not assume office. In 1662 ] returned as the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and became the predominant political figure of the Restoration period.{{citation needed|date=May 2017}} | |||
==Scotland== | |||
{{main|Restoration (Scotland)}} | |||
Charles was proclaimed King again on 14 May 1660. He was not crowned, having been previously crowned at ] in 1651. The Restoration "presented an occasion of universal celebration and rejoicing throughout Scotland".{{sfn|Jackson|2003|p=14}} | |||
Charles II summoned his parliament on 1 January 1661, which began to undo all that been forced on his father ]. The ] made all legislation back to 1633 'void and null'.{{sfn|Jackson|2003|p=78}} | |||
==English colonies== | |||
{{main|Restoration in the English colonies}} | |||
===Caribbean=== | |||
], as a haven for refugees fleeing the ], had held for Charles II under ] until defeated by ]. When news reached Barbados of the King's restoration, ] declared Barbados for the King in July 1660.{{sfn|Higham|1921|p=10}} The planters, however, were not eager for the return of the former governor Lord Willoughby, fearing disputes over titles, but the King ordered he be restored.{{sfn|Higham|1921|pp=12–14}} | |||
] had been a conquest of ]'s and Charles II's claim to the island was therefore questionable. However, Charles II chose not to restore Jamaica to Spain and in 1661 it became a British colony and the planters would claim that they held rights as Englishmen by the King's assumption of the dominion of Jamaica.{{sfn|Monteith|Richards|2001|pp=36–39}} The first governor was ]. He was replaced in 1664 by Thomas Modyford who had been ousted from Barbados.{{citation needed|date=May 2017}} | |||
===North America=== | |||
], with its ] settlement, had supported the Commonwealth and ]. Acceptance of the Restoration was reluctant in some quarters as it highlighted the failure of puritan reform.{{snf|Bremers|1995|pp=151–153}} ] declared in October 1660 and ] lastly in August 1661.{{sfn|Middleton|2002|p=111}} ] provided refuge for ] such as ], ] and ] and would be subsequently merged into ] in 1662, perhaps in punishment.{{sfn|Middleton|2002|p=112}} ], a former governor of Connecticut, and one of whose sons had been a captain in ]'s army, went to England at the Restoration and in 1662 obtained a ] for Connecticut with New Haven annexed to it.{{citation needed|date=May 2017}} | |||
] had resisted the republic until finally occupied by New England Puritans/Parliamentary forces after the ] in 1655. In 1660 the Governor ] tried to turn Maryland into a Commonwealth of its own in what is known as ] but with the fall of the republic in England he was left without support and was replaced by ] upon the Restoration.{{citation needed|date=May 2017}} | |||
] was the most loyal of King Charles II's dominions. It had, according to the eighteenth-century historian ], been "the last of all the King's Dominions that submitted to the Usurpation".{{sfn|Beverley|1722|p=51}} Virginia had provided sanctuary for ] fleeing the ]. In 1650, Virginia was one of the Royalist colonies that became the subject of Parliament's ]. ], who had previously been governor up until 1652, was elected governor in 1660 by the ] and he promptly declared for the King. The ] was restored as the ].{{citation needed|date=May 2017}} | |||
The Somers Isles, alias ] (originally named ''Virgineola''), was originally part of Virginia, and was administered by the ], a spin-off of the ], until 1684. The already existing contest between the mostly Parliamentarian Adventurers (shareholders) of the company in England and the Bermudians, who had their own ] (and many of whom were becoming landowners as they were sold the land they had previously farmed as tenants as the profitability of the tobacco farmed exclusively for the company fell), placed the Bermudians on the side of the Crown despite the large number of Puritans in the colony. | |||
Bermudians were attempting to shift their economy from tobacco to a maritime one and were being thwarted by the company, which relied on revenue from tobacco cultivation. Bermuda was the first colony to recognise Charles II as King in 1649. It controlled its own "army" (of militia) and deposed the Company appointed Governor, electing a replacement. Its Independent Puritans were forced to emigrate, settling the Bahamas under prominent Bermudian settler, sometime Governor of Bermuda, and Parliamentary loyalist ] as the ]. Although eventually reaching a compromise with the Commonwealth, the Bermudians dispute with the company continued and was finally taken before the restored Crown, which was keen for an opportunity to re-assert its authority over the wealthy businessmen who controlled the Somers Isles Company. | |||
The islanders' protest to the Crown initially concerned the mis-treatment of Perient Trott and his heirs (including ]), but expanded to include the company's wider mismanagement of the colony. This led to a lengthy court case in which the Crown championed Bermudians against the company, and resulted in the company's Royal Charter being revoked in 1684. From that point onwards the Crown assumed responsibility for appointing the Colony's governors (it first re-appointed the last company governor). Freed of the company's restraints, the emerging local merchant class came to dominate and shape Bermuda's progress, as Bermudians abandoned agriculture en masse and turned to seafaring. | |||
In 1663 the ] was formed as a reward given to ] of the Restoration. The province was named after the King's father, ].{{citation needed|date=May 2017}} The town of ] was established in 1669 by a party of settlers from Bermuda (some being Bermudians aboard Bermudian vessels, others having passed through Bermuda from as far as England) under the same William Sayle who had led the Eleutheran Adventurers to the Bahamas. In 1670, Sayle became the first Colonial Governor of the ]. | |||
==Culture== | |||
The Restoration and Charles' coronation mark a reversal of the stringent Puritan morality, "as though the pendulum swung from repression to licence more or less overnight".{{sfn|Baker|1994|p=85}} Theatres reopened after having been closed during the protectorship, Puritanism lost its momentum, and bawdy comedy became a recognisable genre. In addition, women were allowed to perform on the commercial stage as professional actresses for the first time. In Scotland, the bishops returned as the ] was reinstated. | |||
To celebrate the occasion and cement their diplomatic relations, the Dutch Republic presented Charles with the ], a fine collection of old master paintings, classical sculptures, furniture, and a yacht. | |||
===Literature=== | |||
{{Main|Restoration literature}} | |||
Restoration literature includes the roughly homogenous styles of literature that centre on a celebration of or reaction to the restored court of King Charles II. It is a literature that includes extremes, for it encompasses both '']'' and the ]'s '']'', the high-spirited ] of '']'' and the moral wisdom of '']''. It saw ]'s '']'', the founding of the ], the experiments and holy meditations of ], the hysterical attacks on theatres from ], and the pioneering of ] from ] and ]. The period witnessed news become a commodity, the ] develop into a periodical art form, and the beginnings of ].<ref>James Runcieman Sutherland, ''Restoration Literature, 1660–1700: Dryden, Bunyan, and Pepys'' (Clarendon Press, 1969).</ref> | |||
===Style=== | |||
{{Main|Restoration style}} | |||
The return of the king and his court from exile led to the replacement of the Puritan severity of the Cromwellian style with a taste for magnificence and opulence and to the introduction of Dutch and French artistic influences. These are evident in furniture in the use of floral ], ] instead of oak, twisted turned supports and legs, exotic ]s, cane seats and backs on chairs, sumptuous ] and ] ] and ornate carved and gilded scrolling bases for cabinets.<ref>P. Arakelin, "The Myth of a Restoration Style Shift", ''Eighteenth Century'', 20 (1979), 227–245.</ref> Similar shifts appear in prose style.<ref>James Egan, "'For mine own private satisfaction': Marvell's aesthetic signatures in the rehearsal Transpros'd." ''Prose Studies'' 22.3 (1999): 17–40.</ref> | |||
===Comedy=== | |||
{{Main|Restoration comedy}} | |||
Comedy, especially bawdy comedy, flourished, and a favourite setting was the bed-chamber.<ref>Jeremy W. Webster, "In and Out of the Bed-chamber: Staging Libertine Desire in Restoration Comedy". ''Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies'' (2012): 77–96.</ref> Indeed, sexually explicit language was encouraged by the king personally and by the rakish style of his court. Historian ] argues: | |||
{{Quote|The best-known fact about the Restoration drama is that it is immoral. The dramatists did not criticize the accepted morality about gambling, drink, love, and pleasure generally, or try, like the dramatists of our own time, to work out their own view of character and conduct. What they did was, according to their respective inclinations, to mock at all restraints. Some were gross, others delicately improper....The dramatists did not merely say anything they liked: they also intended to glory in it and to shock those who did not like it.<ref>George Clark, ''The Later Stuarts, 1660–1714'' (1956) p. 369.</ref>}} | |||
The socially diverse audiences included both aristocrats, their servants and hangers-on, and a substantial middle-class segment.<ref>Harold Love, "Who Were the Restoration Audience?", ''The Yearbook of English Studies'', 10 (1986), 21–40</ref> These playgoers were attracted to the comedies by up-to-the-minute topical writing, by crowded and bustling plots, by the introduction of the first professional actresses, and by the rise of the first celebrity actors. This period saw the first professional female playwright, ].<ref>Bonamy Dobrée, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200818161818/https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=lang_en&id=ZhlaAAAAMAAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PA9&dq=%22Restoration+style%22+severity+england+puritanism&ots=7XVt96Cwd9&sig=4_EZpAi3tZTsT9Sh-iySC9T1nKE |date=18 August 2020 }} (Oxford UP, 1924) .</ref> | |||
===Spectacular=== | |||
{{Main|Restoration spectacular}} | |||
]'s ''Empress of Morocco'' (1673) at ].]] | |||
The '''Restoration spectacular''', or elaborately staged '''machine play''', hit the London public stage in the late 17th-century Restoration period, enthralling audiences with action, music, dance, moveable scenery, ], gorgeous costumes, and special effects such as trapdoor tricks, "flying" actors, and fireworks. These shows have always had a bad reputation as a vulgar and commercial threat to the witty, "legitimate" Restoration drama; however, they drew Londoners in unprecedented numbers and left them dazzled and delighted.<ref>Lyndsey Bakewell, "Changing scenes and flying machines: re-examination of spectacle and the spectacular in Restoration theatre, 1660–1714" (PhD. Diss. Loughborough University, 2016) .</ref> | |||
Basically home-grown and with roots in the early 17th-century court ], though never ashamed of borrowing ideas and stage technology from ], the spectaculars are sometimes called "English opera". However, the variety of them is so untidy that most theatre historians despair of defining them as a genre at all.<ref>Robert D. Hume, ''The Development of English Drama in the Late Seventeenth Century'' (1976) p. 205</ref> Only a handful of works of this period are usually accorded the term "opera", as the musical dimension of most of them is subordinate to the visual. It was spectacle and scenery that drew in the crowds, as shown by many comments in the diary of the theatre-lover ].<ref>Hume, 206–209.</ref> | |||
The expense of mounting ever more elaborate scenic productions drove the two competing theatre companies into a dangerous spiral of huge expenditure and correspondingly huge losses or profits. A fiasco such as ]'s '']'' would leave a company in serious debt, while blockbusters like ]'s ''Psyche'' or Dryden's '']'' would put it comfortably in the black for a long time.<ref>Judith Milhous, ''Thomas Betterton and the Management of Lincoln's Inn Fields 1695–1708'' (Southern Illinois UP, 1979) pp. 47–48.</ref> | |||
==End of the Restoration== | |||
{{Main|Glorious Revolution}} | |||
] by ], commemorating the start of the ] in 1688]] | |||
The ] ended the Restoration. The Glorious Revolution which overthrew King James II of England was propelled by a union of English Parliamentarians with the Dutch stadtholder ] (William of Orange). William's successful invasion of England with a Dutch fleet and army led to his accession to the English throne as William III of England jointly with his wife Mary II of England, James' daughter.<ref>John Miller, ''The Glorious Revolution'' (Routledge, 2014).</ref> | |||
In April 1688, James had re-issued the '']'' and ordered all Anglican clergymen to read it to their congregations. When seven bishops, including the Archbishop of Canterbury, submitted a petition requesting the reconsideration of the King's religious policies, they were arrested and tried for seditious libel. On 30 June 1688, a group of seven Protestant nobles invited the ] to come to England with an army. By September it became clear that William would invade England.<ref name="online">Tim Harris, "James II, the Glorious Revolution, and the destiny of Britain." ''Historical Journal'' 51.3 (2008): 763–775 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200819093349/https://www.jstor.org/stable/20175194 |date=19 August 2020 }}.</ref> | |||
When William arrived on 5 November 1688, James lost his nerve, declined to attack the invading Dutch and tried to flee to France. He was captured in Kent. Later, he was released and placed under Dutch protective guard. Having no desire to make James a martyr, William, Prince of Orange, let him escape on 23 December. James was received in France by his cousin and ally, ], who offered him a palace and a pension.<ref name="online" /> | |||
William convened a ] to decide how to handle the situation. While the Parliament refused to depose James, they declared that James, having fled to France had effectively abdicated the throne, and that the throne was vacant. To fill this vacancy, James's daughter Mary was declared Queen; she was to rule jointly with her husband William, Prince of Orange, who would be king. The English Parliament passed the ] that denounced James for abusing his power.<ref name="Steven C. A 2005">Steven C. A. Pincus, ''England's Glorious Revolution 1688–1689: A Brief History with Documents'' (2005).</ref> | |||
The abuses charged to James included the suspension of the ] after having sworn as king to uphold the supremacy of the Church of England,{{Sfn|Wakeling|1896|p=91}} the prosecution of the ] for merely petitioning the crown, the establishment of a standing army, and the imposition of cruel punishments. The bill also declared that henceforth no Roman Catholic was permitted to ascend the English throne, nor could any English monarch marry a Roman Catholic.<ref name="Steven C. A 2005" /> | |||
==Notes== | |||
{{Notelist}} | |||
{{Reflist|25em}} | |||
==References== | |||
{{div col|colwidth=25em}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Wakeling |first=George Henry |title=King and Parliament (A.D. 1603–1714) |date=1896 |publisher=Scribner |isbn=978-0-524-03867-3 |language=en}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Baker |first=Roger |url=https://archive.org/details/draghistoryoffem00bake |title=Drag: A History of Female Impersonation in the Performing Arts |date=1994 |publisher=NYU Press |isbn=978-0-8147-1253-5 |location=New York City |page= |url-access=registration}} | |||
*{{Citation |last=Beverley |first=Robert |title=The History and Present State of Virginia |date=1722 |page=51}}{{full citation needed|date=May 2017|reason=location and/or publisher}} | |||
*{{Citation |last=Bremers |first=Francis J. |title=The Puritan Experiment: New England Society from Bradford to Edwards |date=1995 |pages=151–153 |edition=Revised}} | |||
* {{Cite encyclopedia |title=Restoration |encyclopedia=The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia |publisher=Columbia University Press |url=http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0841607.html/ |access-date=15 April 2012 |date=2007 |edition=6th |author=CEE staff |archive-date=25 September 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120925002215/http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0841607.html |url-status=dead }} | |||
* {{cite EB1911|ref={{sfnref|Chisholm|1911a}} |wstitle=Lambert, John (general) |display=Lambert, John |volume=16 |pages=108,109}} | |||
* {{cite EB1911|ref={{sfnref|Chisholm|1911b}} |wstitle=Newcastle, Dukes of|display=Newcastle, Dukes of s.v. William Cavendish|volume=19|pages=470, 471}} | |||
* {{cite encyclopedia|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|edition=15| volume=21|ref={{sfnref|EB15}}}}{{full citation needed|date=May 2017|reason=needs article and publication date}} | |||
* {{Cite encyclopedia |title=Restoration |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica |url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/499715/Restoration |access-date=15 April 2012 |date=2012 |edition=online |author=EB staff}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Clark |first=George |title=The Later Stuarts 1660–1714 |date=1953 |publisher=Oxford University Press |edition=2nd |page=3}} | |||
* {{Cite DNB|last=Firth |first=Charles Harding |wstitle=Ingoldsby, Richard (d.1685) |volume=29 |pages=9–11}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Harris |first=Tim |title=Restoration:Charles II and His Kingdoms 1660–1685 |date=2005 |publisher=Allen Lane}} | |||
* {{Citation |last=Higham |first=C.S. |title=The Development of the Leeward Islands under the Restoration 1660–1688 |journal=The Geographical Journal |date=1921 |volume=58 |issue=4 |pages=10, 12–14|doi=10.2307/1781045 |jstor=1781045 |bibcode=1921GeogJ..58..311B }}{{full citation needed|date=May 2017|reason=needs location and publisher}} | |||
* {{Cite journal |date=1802a |title=House of Commons Journal Volume 8: 8 May 1660 |journal=Journal of the House of Commons: Volume 8, 1660–1667 |location=London |publisher=His Majesty's Stationery Office |pages= |ref={{sfnRef|House of Commons|1802a}}}} | |||
* {{Cite journal |date=1802b |title=House of Commons Journal Volume 8: 30 May 1660 |journal=Journal of the House of Commons: Volume 8, 1660–1667 |location=London |publisher=His Majesty's Stationery Office |pages= |ref={{sfnRef|House of Commons|1802b}}}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Hutton |first=Ronald |title=The British Republic 1649–1660 |date=2000 |publisher=Macmillan |edition=2nd |page=121}} | |||
*{{Citation |last=Jackson |first=Clare |author-link=Clare Jackson |title=Restoration Scotland, 1660–1690: Royalist Politics, Religion and Ideas |date=2003 |pages=14, 78 |publisher=Boydell Press}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Jones |first=J.R. |title=Country and Court: England 1658–1714 |date=1978 |publisher=Edward Arnold |page=15}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Keeble |first=N. H. |title=The Restoration: England in the 1660s |date=2002 |publisher=Blackwell Publishers |isbn=978-0-631-23617-7 |series=History of Early Modern England Series |location=Oxford}} | |||
* {{Cite journal |last=McIntosh |first=A.W. |date=1982 |title=The Numbers of the English Regicides |journal=History |volume=67 |pages=195–216 |doi=10.1111/j.1468-229X.1982.tb01387.x |jstor=24418886 |number=220}} | |||
*{{Citation |last=Middleton |first=Richard |title=Colonial America: a history, 1565-1776 |date=2002 |pages=111–112 |edition=3rd |publisher=Blackwell}} | |||
*{{Citation |title=Jamaica in Slavery and Freedom: History, Heritage and Culture |date=2001 |pages=36–39 |editor-last=Monteith |editor-first=Kathleen |publisher=University of the West Indies Press |editor2-last=Richards |editor2-first=Glen}} | |||
* {{Citation |title=Tuesday 23 April 1661 |date=24 April 2004 |url=http://www.pepysdiary.com/archive/1661/04/23/index.php |work=The Diary of Samuel Pepys |ref={{sfnref|The Diary of Samuel Pepys|2004}}}} | |||
* {{Cite journal |last1=Weight |first1=Richard |last2=Haggith |first2=Toby |date=February 2014 |title=Reluctant Regicides |journal=History Today |volume=64 |pages=18–21 |number=22}} | |||
* {{Cite web |last=Yadav |first=Alok |date=18 July 2010 |title=Historical Outline of Restoration and 18th-Century British Literature |url=http://mason.gmu.edu/~ayadav/historical%20outline/overview.htm |access-date=15 April 2012}} | |||
{{Div col end}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Lockyer |first=Roger |title=Tudor and Stuart Britain: 1485–1714 |date=2004 |publisher=Pearson/Longman |isbn=978-0582771888 |edition=3rd}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* http://www.debretts.co.uk/royal_connections/sovereigns_england_17_century.html | * (archived) | ||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070210055851/http://www.socialistreview.org.uk/article.php?articlenumber=8704 |date=10 February 2007 }} | |||
* by ] | |||
* , BBC Radio 4 discussion with Mark Goldie, Richard Ollard and Clare Jackson (''In Our Time'', 15 February 2001) | |||
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1660 restoration of the monarchy in the British Isles
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The Stuart Restoration was the reinstatement in May 1660 of the Stuart monarchy in England, Scotland, and Ireland. It replaced the Commonwealth of England, established in January 1649 after the execution of Charles I, with his son Charles II.
The term is also used to describe the reign of Charles II (1660–1685), and sometimes that of his younger brother James II (1685–1688).
The Protectorate
After Richard Cromwell, Lord Protector from 1658 to 1659, ceded power to the Rump Parliament, Charles Fleetwood and John Lambert then dominated government for a year. On 20 October 1659, George Monck, the governor of Scotland under the Cromwells, marched south with his army from Scotland to oppose Fleetwood and Lambert. Lambert's army began to desert him, and he returned to London almost alone whilst Monck marched to London unopposed. The Presbyterian members, excluded in Pride's Purge of 1648, were recalled, and on 24 December the army restored the Long Parliament.
Fleetwood was deprived of his command and ordered to appear before Parliament to answer for his conduct. On 3 March 1660, Lambert was sent to the Tower of London, from which he escaped a month later. He tried to rekindle the civil war in favour of the Commonwealth by issuing a proclamation calling on all supporters of the "Good Old Cause" to rally on the battlefield of Edgehill, but he was recaptured by Colonel Richard Ingoldsby, a participant in the regicide of Charles I who hoped to win a pardon by handing Lambert over to the new regime. Lambert was incarcerated and died in custody in 1684; Ingoldsby was pardoned.
The restoration was not what George Monck, as an apparent engineer of the Restoration, had intended – if indeed he knew what he intended, for in Clarendon's sardonic words; "the whole machine was infinitely above his strength ... and it is glory enough to his memory that he was instrumental in bringing those things to pass which he had neither wisdom to foresee, nor courage to attempt, nor understanding to contrive".
— Hugh Trevor-Roper Great Tew Circle
Restoration of Charles II
On 4 April 1660, Charles II issued the Declaration of Breda, in which he made several promises in relation to the reclamation of the crown of England. While he did this, Monck organised the Convention Parliament, which met for the first time on 25 April. On 8 May, it proclaimed that King Charles II had been the lawful monarch since the execution of Charles I on 30 January 1649. Historian Tim Harris argues that "Constitutionally, it was as if the last nineteen years had never happened."
Charles returned from exile, leaving the Hague on 23 May and landing at Dover on 25 May. He entered London on 29 May 1660, his 30th birthday. To celebrate His Majesty's Return to his Parliament, 29 May was made a public holiday, popularly known as Oak Apple Day. He was crowned at Westminster Abbey on 23 April 1661.
Some contemporaries described the Restoration as "a divinely ordained miracle". The sudden and unexpected deliverance from political chaos was interpreted as a restoration of the natural and divine order. The Cavalier Parliament convened for the first time on 8 May 1661, and it would endure for over 17 years, finally being dissolved on 24 January 1679. Like its predecessor, it was overwhelmingly Royalist. It is also known as the Pensionary Parliament for the many pensions it granted to adherents of the King.
The leading political figure at the beginning of the Restoration was Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon. It was the "skill and wisdom of Clarendon" which had "made the Restoration unconditional".
Many Royalist exiles returned and were rewarded. Prince Rupert of the Rhine returned to the service of England, became a member of the privy council, and was provided with an annuity. George Goring, 1st Earl of Norwich, returned to be the Captain of the King's guard and received a pension. Marmaduke Langdale returned and was made "Baron Langdale". William Cavendish, Marquess of Newcastle, returned and was able to regain the greater part of his estates. He was invested in 1666 with the Order of the Garter (which had been bestowed upon him in 1650), and was advanced to a dukedom on 16 March 1665.
England and Wales
Commonwealth regicides and rebels
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The Indemnity and Oblivion Act, which became law on 29 August 1660, pardoned all past treason against the crown, but specifically excluded those involved in the trial and execution of Charles I. Thirty-one of the 59 commissioners (judges) who had signed the death warrant in 1649 were living. The regicides were hunted down; some escaped but most were found and put on trial. Three escaped to the American colonies. New Haven, Connecticut, secretly harboured Edward Whalley, William Goffe and John Dixwell, and after American independence named streets after them to honour them as forefathers of the American Revolution.
In the ensuing trials, twelve were condemned to death. The Fifth Monarchist Thomas Harrison, the first person found guilty of regicide, who had been the seventeenth of the 59 commissioners to sign the death warrant, was the first regicide to be hanged, drawn and quartered because he was considered by the new government still to represent a real threat to the re-established order. In October 1660, at Charing Cross or Tyburn, London, ten were publicly hanged, drawn and quartered: Thomas Harrison, John Jones, Adrian Scrope, John Carew, Thomas Scot, and Gregory Clement, who had signed the king's death warrant; the preacher Hugh Peters; Francis Hacker and Daniel Axtell, who commanded the guards at the king's trial and execution; and John Cooke, the solicitor who directed the prosecution. The 10 judges who were on the panel but did not sign the death warrant were also convicted.
Oliver Cromwell, Henry Ireton, Judge Thomas Pride, and Judge John Bradshaw were posthumously attainted for high treason. Because Parliament is a court, the highest in the land, a bill of attainder is a legislative act declaring a person guilty of treason or felony, in contrast to the regular judicial process of trial and conviction. In January 1661, the corpses of Cromwell, Ireton and Bradshaw were exhumed and hanged in chains at Tyburn.
In 1661 John Okey, one of the regicides who signed the death warrant of Charles I, was brought back from Holland along with Miles Corbet, friend and lawyer to Cromwell, and John Barkstead, former constable of the Tower of London. They were all imprisoned in the Tower. From there they were taken to Tyburn and hanged, drawn and quartered on 19 April 1662. A further 19 regicides were imprisoned for life.
John Lambert was not in London for the trial of Charles I. At the Restoration, he was found guilty of high treason and remained in custody in Guernsey for the rest of his life. Henry Vane the Younger served on the Council of State during the Interregnum even though he refused to take the oath which expressed approbation (approval) of the King's execution. At the Restoration, after much debate in Parliament, he was exempted from the Indemnity and Oblivion Act. In 1662 he was tried for high treason, found guilty and beheaded on Tower Hill on 14 June 1662.
Regrant of certain Commonwealth titles
Further information: Knights, baronets and peers of the ProtectorateThe Instrument of Government, The Protectorate's written constitutions, gave to the Lord Protector the King's power to grant titles of honour. Over 30 new knighthoods were granted under the Protectorate. These knighthoods passed into oblivion upon the Restoration of Charles II, but many were regranted by the restored King.
Of the eleven Protectorate baronetcies, two had been previously granted by Charles I during the Civil War, but under Commonwealth legislation they were not recognised under the Protectorate (hence the Lord Protector's regranting of them). When that legislation passed into oblivion these two baronets were entitled to use the baronetcies granted by Charles I, and Charles II regranted four more. Only one now continues: Richard Thomas Willy, 14th baronet, is the direct successor of Griffith Williams. Of the remaining Protectorate baronets one, William Ellis, was granted a knighthood by Charles II.
Edmund Dunch was created Baron Burnell of East Wittenham in April 1658, but this barony was not regranted. The male line failed in 1719 with the death of his grandson, also Edmund Dunch, so no one can lay claim to the title.
The one hereditary viscountcy Cromwell created for certain, (making Charles Howard Viscount Howard of Morpeth and Baron Gilsland) continues to this day. In April 1661, Howard was created Earl of Carlisle, Viscount Howard of Morpeth, and Baron Dacre of Gillesland. The present Earl is a direct descendant of this Cromwellian creation and Restoration recreation.
Venner rebellion (1661)
On 6 January 1661, about 50 Fifth Monarchists, headed by a wine-cooper named Thomas Venner, tried to gain possession of London in the name of "King Jesus". Most were either killed or taken prisoner; on 19 and 21 January 1661, Venner and 10 others were hanged, drawn and quartered for high treason.
Church of England settlement
The Church of England was restored as the national Church in England, backed by the Clarendon Code and the Act of Uniformity 1662. People reportedly "pranced around May poles as a way of taunting the Presbyterians and Independents" and "burned copies of the Solemn League and Covenant".
Ireland
Main article: Restoration (Ireland)"The commonwealth parliamentary union was, after 1660, treated as null and void". As in England the republic was deemed constitutionally never to have occurred. The Convention Parliament was dissolved by Charles II in January 1661, and he summoned his first parliament in Ireland in May 1661. In 1662, 29 May was made a public holiday known to this day as Oak Apple Day.
Coote, Broghill and Maurice Eustace were initially the main political figures in the Restoration. George Monck, Duke of Albemarle was given the position of Lord Lieutenant of Ireland but he did not assume office. In 1662 James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde returned as the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and became the predominant political figure of the Restoration period.
Scotland
Main article: Restoration (Scotland)Charles was proclaimed King again on 14 May 1660. He was not crowned, having been previously crowned at Scone in 1651. The Restoration "presented an occasion of universal celebration and rejoicing throughout Scotland".
Charles II summoned his parliament on 1 January 1661, which began to undo all that been forced on his father Charles I of Scotland. The Rescissory Act 1661 made all legislation back to 1633 'void and null'.
English colonies
Main article: Restoration in the English coloniesCaribbean
Barbados, as a haven for refugees fleeing the English republic, had held for Charles II under Lord Willoughby until defeated by George Ayscue. When news reached Barbados of the King's restoration, Thomas Modyford declared Barbados for the King in July 1660. The planters, however, were not eager for the return of the former governor Lord Willoughby, fearing disputes over titles, but the King ordered he be restored.
Jamaica had been a conquest of Oliver Cromwell's and Charles II's claim to the island was therefore questionable. However, Charles II chose not to restore Jamaica to Spain and in 1661 it became a British colony and the planters would claim that they held rights as Englishmen by the King's assumption of the dominion of Jamaica. The first governor was Lord Windsor. He was replaced in 1664 by Thomas Modyford who had been ousted from Barbados.
North America
New England, with its Puritan settlement, had supported the Commonwealth and the Protectorate. Acceptance of the Restoration was reluctant in some quarters as it highlighted the failure of puritan reform. Rhode Island declared in October 1660 and Massachusetts lastly in August 1661. The Colony of New Haven provided refuge for Regicides such as Edward Whalley, William Goffe and John Dixwell and would be subsequently merged into Connecticut in 1662, perhaps in punishment. John Winthrop, a former governor of Connecticut, and one of whose sons had been a captain in Monck's army, went to England at the Restoration and in 1662 obtained a royal charter for Connecticut with New Haven annexed to it.
Maryland had resisted the republic until finally occupied by New England Puritans/Parliamentary forces after the Battle of the Severn in 1655. In 1660 the Governor Josias Fendall tried to turn Maryland into a Commonwealth of its own in what is known as Fendall's Rebellion but with the fall of the republic in England he was left without support and was replaced by Philip Calvert upon the Restoration.
Virginia was the most loyal of King Charles II's dominions. It had, according to the eighteenth-century historian Robert Beverley Jr., been "the last of all the King's Dominions that submitted to the Usurpation". Virginia had provided sanctuary for Cavaliers fleeing the English republic. In 1650, Virginia was one of the Royalist colonies that became the subject of Parliament's An Act for prohibiting Trade with the Barbadoes, Virginia, Bermuda and Antego. William Berkeley, who had previously been governor up until 1652, was elected governor in 1660 by the House of Burgesses and he promptly declared for the King. The Anglican Church was restored as the established church.
The Somers Isles, alias Bermuda (originally named Virgineola), was originally part of Virginia, and was administered by the Somers Isles Company, a spin-off of the Virginia Company, until 1684. The already existing contest between the mostly Parliamentarian Adventurers (shareholders) of the company in England and the Bermudians, who had their own House of Assembly (and many of whom were becoming landowners as they were sold the land they had previously farmed as tenants as the profitability of the tobacco farmed exclusively for the company fell), placed the Bermudians on the side of the Crown despite the large number of Puritans in the colony.
Bermudians were attempting to shift their economy from tobacco to a maritime one and were being thwarted by the company, which relied on revenue from tobacco cultivation. Bermuda was the first colony to recognise Charles II as King in 1649. It controlled its own "army" (of militia) and deposed the Company appointed Governor, electing a replacement. Its Independent Puritans were forced to emigrate, settling the Bahamas under prominent Bermudian settler, sometime Governor of Bermuda, and Parliamentary loyalist William Sayle as the Eleutheran Adventurers. Although eventually reaching a compromise with the Commonwealth, the Bermudians dispute with the company continued and was finally taken before the restored Crown, which was keen for an opportunity to re-assert its authority over the wealthy businessmen who controlled the Somers Isles Company.
The islanders' protest to the Crown initially concerned the mis-treatment of Perient Trott and his heirs (including Nicholas Trott), but expanded to include the company's wider mismanagement of the colony. This led to a lengthy court case in which the Crown championed Bermudians against the company, and resulted in the company's Royal Charter being revoked in 1684. From that point onwards the Crown assumed responsibility for appointing the Colony's governors (it first re-appointed the last company governor). Freed of the company's restraints, the emerging local merchant class came to dominate and shape Bermuda's progress, as Bermudians abandoned agriculture en masse and turned to seafaring.
In 1663 the Province of Carolina was formed as a reward given to some supporters of the Restoration. The province was named after the King's father, Charles I. The town of Charleston was established in 1669 by a party of settlers from Bermuda (some being Bermudians aboard Bermudian vessels, others having passed through Bermuda from as far as England) under the same William Sayle who had led the Eleutheran Adventurers to the Bahamas. In 1670, Sayle became the first Colonial Governor of the Province of Carolina.
Culture
The Restoration and Charles' coronation mark a reversal of the stringent Puritan morality, "as though the pendulum swung from repression to licence more or less overnight". Theatres reopened after having been closed during the protectorship, Puritanism lost its momentum, and bawdy comedy became a recognisable genre. In addition, women were allowed to perform on the commercial stage as professional actresses for the first time. In Scotland, the bishops returned as the Episcopacy was reinstated.
To celebrate the occasion and cement their diplomatic relations, the Dutch Republic presented Charles with the Dutch Gift, a fine collection of old master paintings, classical sculptures, furniture, and a yacht.
Literature
Main article: Restoration literatureRestoration literature includes the roughly homogenous styles of literature that centre on a celebration of or reaction to the restored court of King Charles II. It is a literature that includes extremes, for it encompasses both Paradise Lost and the John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester's Sodom, the high-spirited sexual comedy of The Country Wife and the moral wisdom of The Pilgrim's Progress. It saw Locke's Treatises of Government, the founding of the Royal Society, the experiments and holy meditations of Robert Boyle, the hysterical attacks on theatres from Jeremy Collier, and the pioneering of literary criticism from John Dryden and John Dennis. The period witnessed news become a commodity, the essay develop into a periodical art form, and the beginnings of textual criticism.
Style
Main article: Restoration styleThe return of the king and his court from exile led to the replacement of the Puritan severity of the Cromwellian style with a taste for magnificence and opulence and to the introduction of Dutch and French artistic influences. These are evident in furniture in the use of floral marquetry, walnut instead of oak, twisted turned supports and legs, exotic veneers, cane seats and backs on chairs, sumptuous tapestry and velvet upholstery and ornate carved and gilded scrolling bases for cabinets. Similar shifts appear in prose style.
Comedy
Main article: Restoration comedyComedy, especially bawdy comedy, flourished, and a favourite setting was the bed-chamber. Indeed, sexually explicit language was encouraged by the king personally and by the rakish style of his court. Historian George Norman Clark argues:
The best-known fact about the Restoration drama is that it is immoral. The dramatists did not criticize the accepted morality about gambling, drink, love, and pleasure generally, or try, like the dramatists of our own time, to work out their own view of character and conduct. What they did was, according to their respective inclinations, to mock at all restraints. Some were gross, others delicately improper....The dramatists did not merely say anything they liked: they also intended to glory in it and to shock those who did not like it.
The socially diverse audiences included both aristocrats, their servants and hangers-on, and a substantial middle-class segment. These playgoers were attracted to the comedies by up-to-the-minute topical writing, by crowded and bustling plots, by the introduction of the first professional actresses, and by the rise of the first celebrity actors. This period saw the first professional female playwright, Aphra Behn.
Spectacular
Main article: Restoration spectacularThe Restoration spectacular, or elaborately staged machine play, hit the London public stage in the late 17th-century Restoration period, enthralling audiences with action, music, dance, moveable scenery, baroque illusionistic painting, gorgeous costumes, and special effects such as trapdoor tricks, "flying" actors, and fireworks. These shows have always had a bad reputation as a vulgar and commercial threat to the witty, "legitimate" Restoration drama; however, they drew Londoners in unprecedented numbers and left them dazzled and delighted.
Basically home-grown and with roots in the early 17th-century court masque, though never ashamed of borrowing ideas and stage technology from French opera, the spectaculars are sometimes called "English opera". However, the variety of them is so untidy that most theatre historians despair of defining them as a genre at all. Only a handful of works of this period are usually accorded the term "opera", as the musical dimension of most of them is subordinate to the visual. It was spectacle and scenery that drew in the crowds, as shown by many comments in the diary of the theatre-lover Samuel Pepys.
The expense of mounting ever more elaborate scenic productions drove the two competing theatre companies into a dangerous spiral of huge expenditure and correspondingly huge losses or profits. A fiasco such as John Dryden's Albion and Albanius would leave a company in serious debt, while blockbusters like Thomas Shadwell's Psyche or Dryden's King Arthur would put it comfortably in the black for a long time.
End of the Restoration
Main article: Glorious RevolutionThe Glorious Revolution ended the Restoration. The Glorious Revolution which overthrew King James II of England was propelled by a union of English Parliamentarians with the Dutch stadtholder William III of Orange-Nassau (William of Orange). William's successful invasion of England with a Dutch fleet and army led to his accession to the English throne as William III of England jointly with his wife Mary II of England, James' daughter.
In April 1688, James had re-issued the Declaration of Indulgence and ordered all Anglican clergymen to read it to their congregations. When seven bishops, including the Archbishop of Canterbury, submitted a petition requesting the reconsideration of the King's religious policies, they were arrested and tried for seditious libel. On 30 June 1688, a group of seven Protestant nobles invited the Prince of Orange to come to England with an army. By September it became clear that William would invade England.
When William arrived on 5 November 1688, James lost his nerve, declined to attack the invading Dutch and tried to flee to France. He was captured in Kent. Later, he was released and placed under Dutch protective guard. Having no desire to make James a martyr, William, Prince of Orange, let him escape on 23 December. James was received in France by his cousin and ally, Louis XIV, who offered him a palace and a pension.
William convened a Convention Parliament to decide how to handle the situation. While the Parliament refused to depose James, they declared that James, having fled to France had effectively abdicated the throne, and that the throne was vacant. To fill this vacancy, James's daughter Mary was declared Queen; she was to rule jointly with her husband William, Prince of Orange, who would be king. The English Parliament passed the Bill of Rights of 1689 that denounced James for abusing his power.
The abuses charged to James included the suspension of the Test Acts after having sworn as king to uphold the supremacy of the Church of England, the prosecution of the Seven Bishops for merely petitioning the crown, the establishment of a standing army, and the imposition of cruel punishments. The bill also declared that henceforth no Roman Catholic was permitted to ascend the English throne, nor could any English monarch marry a Roman Catholic.
Notes
- Cromwell had intended to make Bulstrode Whitelocke a viscount, but it is not clear if he so before he died.
- ^ Chisholm 1911a, p. 108.
- Firth 1892, p. 10.
- House of Commons 1802a.
- Harris 2005, p. 47.
- ^ Pepys Diary 23 April 1661 Archived 8 July 2006 at the Wayback Machine.
- House of Commons 1802b.
- Jones 1978, p. 15.
- Wallace, David C. (2013). Twenty-Two Turbulent Years 1639–1661. Fast-Print Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78035-660-0.
- Clark 1953, p. 3.
- Chisholm 1911b, p. 470.
- Weight & Haggith 2014, pp. 18–21.
- McIntosh 1982, pp. 195–216.
- Dakers, Caroline (2018). Fonthill Recovered: A Cultural History. UCL Press. ISBN 978-1-78735-047-2.
- Harris 2005, pp. 52–53.
- EB15, p. 1012.
- Jackson 2003, p. 14.
- Jackson 2003, p. 78.
- Higham 1921, p. 10.
- Higham 1921, pp. 12–14.
- Monteith & Richards 2001, pp. 36–39.
- Bremers 1995, pp. 151–153.
- Middleton 2002, p. 111.
- Middleton 2002, p. 112.
- Beverley 1722, p. 51.
- Baker 1994, p. 85.
- James Runcieman Sutherland, Restoration Literature, 1660–1700: Dryden, Bunyan, and Pepys (Clarendon Press, 1969).
- P. Arakelin, "The Myth of a Restoration Style Shift", Eighteenth Century, 20 (1979), 227–245.
- James Egan, "'For mine own private satisfaction': Marvell's aesthetic signatures in the rehearsal Transpros'd." Prose Studies 22.3 (1999): 17–40.
- Jeremy W. Webster, "In and Out of the Bed-chamber: Staging Libertine Desire in Restoration Comedy". Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies (2012): 77–96.
- George Clark, The Later Stuarts, 1660–1714 (1956) p. 369.
- Harold Love, "Who Were the Restoration Audience?", The Yearbook of English Studies, 10 (1986), 21–40
- Bonamy Dobrée, Restoration Comedy, 1660–1720 Archived 18 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine (Oxford UP, 1924) .
- Lyndsey Bakewell, "Changing scenes and flying machines: re-examination of spectacle and the spectacular in Restoration theatre, 1660–1714" (PhD. Diss. Loughborough University, 2016) online.
- Robert D. Hume, The Development of English Drama in the Late Seventeenth Century (1976) p. 205
- Hume, 206–209.
- Judith Milhous, Thomas Betterton and the Management of Lincoln's Inn Fields 1695–1708 (Southern Illinois UP, 1979) pp. 47–48.
- John Miller, The Glorious Revolution (Routledge, 2014).
- ^ Tim Harris, "James II, the Glorious Revolution, and the destiny of Britain." Historical Journal 51.3 (2008): 763–775 online Archived 19 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Steven C. A. Pincus, England's Glorious Revolution 1688–1689: A Brief History with Documents (2005).
- Wakeling 1896, p. 91.
References
- Wakeling, George Henry (1896). King and Parliament (A.D. 1603–1714). Scribner. ISBN 978-0-524-03867-3.
- Baker, Roger (1994). Drag: A History of Female Impersonation in the Performing Arts. New York City: NYU Press. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-8147-1253-5.
- Beverley, Robert (1722), The History and Present State of Virginia, p. 51
- Bremers, Francis J. (1995), The Puritan Experiment: New England Society from Bradford to Edwards (Revised ed.), pp. 151–153
- CEE staff (2007). "Restoration". The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia (6th ed.). Columbia University Press. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2012.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lambert, John" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 108, 109.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Newcastle, Dukes of s.v. William Cavendish" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 470, 471.
- Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (15 ed.).
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(help) - EB staff (2012). "Restoration". Encyclopaedia Britannica (online ed.). Retrieved 15 April 2012.
- Clark, George (1953). The Later Stuarts 1660–1714 (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 3.
- Firth, Charles Harding (1892). "Ingoldsby, Richard (d.1685)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 29. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 9–11.
- Harris, Tim (2005). Restoration:Charles II and His Kingdoms 1660–1685. Allen Lane.
- Higham, C.S. (1921), "The Development of the Leeward Islands under the Restoration 1660–1688", The Geographical Journal, 58 (4): 10, 12–14, Bibcode:1921GeogJ..58..311B, doi:10.2307/1781045, JSTOR 1781045
- "House of Commons Journal Volume 8: 8 May 1660". Journal of the House of Commons: Volume 8, 1660–1667. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office: 16–18. 1802a.
- "House of Commons Journal Volume 8: 30 May 1660". Journal of the House of Commons: Volume 8, 1660–1667. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office: 49–50. 1802b.
- Hutton, Ronald (2000). The British Republic 1649–1660 (2nd ed.). Macmillan. p. 121.
- Jackson, Clare (2003), Restoration Scotland, 1660–1690: Royalist Politics, Religion and Ideas, Boydell Press, pp. 14, 78
- Jones, J.R. (1978). Country and Court: England 1658–1714. Edward Arnold. p. 15.
- Keeble, N. H. (2002). The Restoration: England in the 1660s. History of Early Modern England Series. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 978-0-631-23617-7.
- McIntosh, A.W. (1982). "The Numbers of the English Regicides". History. 67 (220): 195–216. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.1982.tb01387.x. JSTOR 24418886.
- Middleton, Richard (2002), Colonial America: a history, 1565-1776 (3rd ed.), Blackwell, pp. 111–112
- Monteith, Kathleen; Richards, Glen, eds. (2001), Jamaica in Slavery and Freedom: History, Heritage and Culture, University of the West Indies Press, pp. 36–39
- "Tuesday 23 April 1661", The Diary of Samuel Pepys, 24 April 2004
- Weight, Richard; Haggith, Toby (February 2014). "Reluctant Regicides". History Today. 64 (22): 18–21.
- Yadav, Alok (18 July 2010). "Historical Outline of Restoration and 18th-Century British Literature". Retrieved 15 April 2012.
Further reading
- Lockyer, Roger (2004). Tudor and Stuart Britain: 1485–1714 (3rd ed.). Pearson/Longman. ISBN 978-0582771888.
External links
- Sovereigns England – 17th century (archived)
- Review of 'Revolution and Counter-Revolution in England, Ireland and Scotland 1658–60', by Brian Manning Archived 10 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- Chapter V. The Stewart Restoration by Charles Harding Firth
- "The Restoration", BBC Radio 4 discussion with Mark Goldie, Richard Ollard and Clare Jackson (In Our Time, 15 February 2001)