Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- I THE LAST PHASE OF MEDIEVAL GOVERNMENT
- II THE BUREAUCRAT MINISTER
- III THE REFORM OF THE AGENCIES OF FINANCE
- IV PRIVY SEAL, SIGNET, AND SECRETARY
- V THE PRIVY COUNCIL
- VI THE KING'S HOUSEHOLD
- VII THE ADMINISTRATIVE REVOLUTION
- Appendix I Cromwell and the mastership of the king's wards
- Appendix II Documents
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- I THE LAST PHASE OF MEDIEVAL GOVERNMENT
- II THE BUREAUCRAT MINISTER
- III THE REFORM OF THE AGENCIES OF FINANCE
- IV PRIVY SEAL, SIGNET, AND SECRETARY
- V THE PRIVY COUNCIL
- VI THE KING'S HOUSEHOLD
- VII THE ADMINISTRATIVE REVOLUTION
- Appendix I Cromwell and the mastership of the king's wards
- Appendix II Documents
- Index
Summary
As the administration of England was slipping away from the king's household and transferring itself to national bureaucratic offices and departments, the household itself was left behind and had to be put in order. Up to this time it had played a double part, taking care of the king's person and court, and also supplying officials and even departments for purposes of national government. Though it was deprived of this second of its activities, it retained the first; until the establishment of the civil list in 1782—the final separation between service for the king and service for the crown—the royal household remained one of the institutions of the king's government. If the term be permitted, we might say that in the 1530's it became a department of state, a department specializing in the administration of the king's court. It is well known that throughout, at any rate, the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries the mainspring of government lay in the immediate entourage of the king—in his household, whose officers, high and low, were the real ministers and executive servants of the royal will. It is as well known that, if one wishes to discover the administrative history of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, it is useless to look to the household whose officers were the notorious sinecurists, those men whose support in parliament was indiscriminately at the disposal of anyone who controlled patronage, and who were mown down in their hundreds by the economic reform of 1782.
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- Information
- Tudor Revolution in Government , pp. 370 - 414Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1953