Description
| Product ID: | 9780198203841 |
| Product Form: | Hardback |
| Country of Manufacture: | GB |
| Title: | The True Law of Kingship |
| Subtitle: | Concepts of Monarchy in Early-Modern Scotland |
| Authors: | Author: J. H. Burns |
| Page Count: | 332 |
| Subjects: | European history, British & Irish history, History, Social and cultural history, Genealogy, heraldry, names and honours, History of ideas, Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700, Social & cultural history, Genealogy, heraldry, names & honours, History of ideas, Scotland, c 1500 to c 1600 |
| Description: | Select Guide Rating In the 16th century, commoners were told to fear God and honour the King. But what if the King ordered one thing and God's law said another? In this study, the author examines the dilemma by focusing on the Scottish response to monarchial government during this period. `Fear God, honour the king''. Sixteenth-century people were supposed to do both. But what was the king entitled to command? And what if he ordered one thing and God''s law said another? In this fascinating and original study, James Burns examines these questions by focusing on a neglected area of study: the Scottish experience. Sixteenth-century Scots lived through intense political and religious conflict, which generated a substantial literature of political debate. This debate was of such an intensity that James VI, the first king to rule over Scotland and England, wrote his own book on the subject: The True Lawe of Free Monarchies Some of the substantial literature of political debate has long been recognized as important in the wider history of European political thought. Knox and Buchanan as exponents of ''resistance theory'', Blackwood and Barclay as defenders of ''absolute'' monarchy, have had that recognition. James VI uniquely expounding ''divine right'' principles from the throne, has likewise had his place. More recently, the significance of the late-scholastic theory of John Mair has been increasingly acknowledged. This book, however, is the first attempt to bring together systematically these and less familiar elements in a rich and varied body of political thought. The Scottish response to monarchical government not only provides a microcosmic view of European thinking on the subject, it also contributes substantially to our understanding of the Scottish element in the new `British'' polity which was emerging at the end of the period. |
| Imprint Name: | Clarendon Press |
| Publisher Name: | Oxford University Press |
| Country of Publication: | GB |
| Publishing Date: | 1996-01-11 |