Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- BOOK VI GOVERNMENT IN ENGLAND WITHOUT THE PARLIAMENT. TROUBLES IN SCOTLAND
- CHAP. I Peace with France and Spain
- CHAP. II Share of England in the events of the Thirty Years' War, 1630—1636
- CHAP. III Monarchical tendencies of the Home Government
- CHAP. IV Conflicting tendencies of the Age, and within the Kingdom of Great Britain
- CHAP. V Origin and outbreak of Ecclesiastical Disturbances in Scotland
- CHAP. VI The Scottish Covenant
- CHAP. VII Attempts at an accommodation. Independent Assembly of the Church
- BOOK VII CONNEXION BETWEEN THE TROUBLES IN SCOTLAND AND THOSE IN ENGLAND AND ELSEWHERE
- BOOK VIII THE LONG PARLIAMENT AND THE KING, DOWN TO THE OUTBREAK OF THE CIVIL WAR
- BOOK IX THE ENGLISH CIVIL WAR, 1642—1646
- BOOK X INDEPENDENTS AND PRESBYTERIANS. FATE OF THE KING
CHAP. I - Peace with France and Spain
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- BOOK VI GOVERNMENT IN ENGLAND WITHOUT THE PARLIAMENT. TROUBLES IN SCOTLAND
- CHAP. I Peace with France and Spain
- CHAP. II Share of England in the events of the Thirty Years' War, 1630—1636
- CHAP. III Monarchical tendencies of the Home Government
- CHAP. IV Conflicting tendencies of the Age, and within the Kingdom of Great Britain
- CHAP. V Origin and outbreak of Ecclesiastical Disturbances in Scotland
- CHAP. VI The Scottish Covenant
- CHAP. VII Attempts at an accommodation. Independent Assembly of the Church
- BOOK VII CONNEXION BETWEEN THE TROUBLES IN SCOTLAND AND THOSE IN ENGLAND AND ELSEWHERE
- BOOK VIII THE LONG PARLIAMENT AND THE KING, DOWN TO THE OUTBREAK OF THE CIVIL WAR
- BOOK IX THE ENGLISH CIVIL WAR, 1642—1646
- BOOK X INDEPENDENTS AND PRESBYTERIANS. FATE OF THE KING
Summary
If we consider the embarrassment in which Charles I had been involved by his conduct of the war, we are tempted to assume that, in order to extricate himself from it, he must have opened negotiations with the two great powers with which he was at war whilst they were still at variance with one another. This however was not the case.
Negotiations with France were opened at the instigation of the powers combined to resist Spain, between which an agreement had first been set on foot by James I, and had been renewed by Buckingham. Those powers regarded the breach between England and France as a misfortune, which they must endeavour to obviate if they would carry on the war against Austria and Spain with full vigour. The Republic of Venice, which felt itself most seriously threatened by these powers, made a great point of promoting a reconciliation between France and England by the agency of its ambassadors.
A few days before his unhappy end, Buckingham withdrew with the Venetian ambassador, Aluise Contarini, into a retired chamber in one of his country-houses, and there concerted with him a letter of pacific import to his brother envoy in France, for him to communicate to the French court. While Buckingham was preparing to strike a blow, he still hoped to procure from France tolerable conditions for the besieged town of Rochelle. All other difficulties he thought might then be removed in a couple of hours.
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- A History of EnglandPrincipally in the Seventeenth Century, pp. 3 - 14Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1875