Saturday, October 26, 2019
Origins of the English Civil War Essay -- european history, british hi
The English Civil War of 1642-1651 can be considered as a feud between   the King and the English Parliament. Long before the onset of the   civil war, Parliament and king Charles I had distrusted each other.   As a result, Parliament often refused to finance the kingââ¬â¢s wars.   Unable to gain enough support from Parliament, Charles I challenged   local control of nobles and landowners, who composed of the majority   of Parliament, by ââ¬Å"levying new tariffs and duties, attempting to   collect discontinued taxes, and subjecting English property owners   toâ⬠¦forced loan and then imprisoning those who refused to payâ⬠¦as well   as quartering troops in private homesâ⬠ (Craig et al. 560). Parliament   attempted to control the kingââ¬â¢s power when it presented to Charles the   Petition of Right in 1628. This petition required that there would be   no loans or taxation without the consent of Parliament, that Charles   would not be able to imprison any free man without due cause, and that   no troops would be quartered in private homes. Although Charles   initially agreed to the petition, he dissolved Parliament in 1629 and   did not recall it again until 1640. Parliamentââ¬â¢s resentment of the   kingââ¬â¢s tyrannical actions combined with its resistance to control the   king refused to grant Charles financial support for the war with   Ireland in 1640. Charles retaliated and made inevitable a civil war   when he dissolved Parliament once more and arrested five of its   members (Taylor vii). The resulting tension between Charles and   Parliament eventually erupted in a Civil War in 1642 and lasted until   1651.     Many scholars have been associating the phenomenon of the English   Civil War to a variety of causes and motives. Among Parliamentââ¬â¢s   support...              .... Furthermore, Charles I   had attempted to make himself the first despot by reducing Parliament   to a nullity (Macaulay 64). It should be noted that during the time   of Charles I, the king had no standing army, and that the king could   not legally raise money without the consent of Parliament (Taylor 3,   4). However, because Charles had always been in favor of the notion   of absolute monarchy (Taylor viii), he had dared to make   extraparliamentary actions without the consent of Parliament. These   included the trespass onto the constitutional rights of the English   people, levying taxes without the consent of Parliament, imprisoning   civilians and court nobles alike without due cause, and quartering   troops in private homes during times of war (Macaulay 63-64). All   these actions challenged local control of nobles and landowners (Craig   et al. 560).                             
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