Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-mwx4w Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-16T03:11:53.860Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 October 2022

Markku Peltonen
Affiliation:
University of Helsinki
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Secondary Sources

Albertone, Manuela (2016), ‘Democracy and representation’, in Whatmore, Richard and Young, Brian eds., A companion to intellectual history, Chichester, 331–44.Google Scholar
Anthony, H. Sylvia (1966), ‘Mercurius Politicus under Milton’, Journal of the History of Ideas, XXVII, 593609.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker, P. R. S. (2004), ‘Larner, William’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Baker, Philip (2009), ‘Rhetoric, reality and the varieties of civil-war radicalism’, in Adamson, John ed., The English Civil War, Basingstoke, 202–24.Google Scholar
Baker, Philip (2012), ‘The Levellers, decentralisation and the Agreements of the people’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot eds., The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 97116.Google Scholar
Baker, Philip (2013), ‘The franchise debate revisited: the Levellers and the army’, in Taylor, Stephen and Tapsell, Grant eds., The nature of the English Revolution revisited, Woodbridge, 103–12.Google Scholar
Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot, eds. (2012), The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barber, Sarah (1990), ‘The Engagement for the Council of State and the establishment of the Commonwealth government’, Historical Research, 63, 4457.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barber, Sarah (1998), Regicide and republicanism. Politics and ethics in the English Revolution, 1646–1659, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Barber, Sarah (2000), A revolutionary rogue. Henry Marten and the English Republic, Stroud.Google Scholar
Braddick, Michael (2018), The common freedom of the people. John Lilburne & the English Revolution, Oxford.Google Scholar
Brailsford, H. N. (1983), The Levellers and the English Revolution, 2nd ed., Nottingham.Google Scholar
Brenner, Robert (2003), Merchants and revolution. Commercial change, political conflict, and London’s overseas traders, 1550–1653, London.Google Scholar
Buchstein, Hubertus (2015), ‘Countering the “democracy thesis” – sortition in ancient Greek political theory’, Redescriptions, 18, 126–57.Google Scholar
Burgess, Glenn (1986), ‘Usurpation, obligation and obedience in the thought of the Engagement controversy’, Historical Journal, 29, 515–36.Google Scholar
Burgess, Glenn (2004a), ‘Regicide: the execution of Charles I and English political thought’, in von Friedeburg, Robert ed., Murder and monarchy. Regicide in European history, 1300–1800, Basingstoke, 212–36.Google Scholar
Burgess, Glenn (2004b), ‘Sclater, William (bap. 1609, d. 1661), Church of England clergyman and religious writer’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Burgess, Glenn (2009), British political thought, 1500–1660, Basingstoke.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Capozzi, Eugenio (1998), ‘Republicanism and representative democracy: the heritage of James Harrington’, European Review of History, 5, 197204.Google Scholar
Capp, Bernard (1972), The fifth monarchy men. A study of seventeenth-century English millenarianism, London.Google Scholar
Capp, Bernard (1979), Astrology and the popular press. English almanacs 1500–1800, London.Google Scholar
Capp, Bernard (2012), England’s culture wars. Puritan reformation and its enemies in the Interregnum, 1649–1660, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caricchio, Mario (2011), ‘News from the New Jerusalem: Giles Calvert and the radical experience’, in Hessayon, Ariel and Finegan, David eds., Varieties of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century radicalism in context, Farnham, 6986.Google Scholar
Chernaik, Warren (2017), Milton and the burden of freedom, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coffey, John (2006), John Godwin and the puritan revolution. Religion and intellectual change in seventeenth-century England, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Collins, Jeffrey R. (2005), The allegiance of Thomas Hobbes, Oxford.Google Scholar
Collinson, Patrick (1987), ‘The monarchical republic of queen Elizabeth I’, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, 69, 394424.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Como, David R. (2007), ‘Secret printing, the crisis of 1640, and the origins of civil war radicalism’, Past & Present, 196, 3782.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Como, David R. (2012), ‘Print, censorship, and ideological escalation in the English Civil War’, Journal of British Studies, 51, 820–57.Google Scholar
Como, David R. (2018), Radical parliamentarians and the English Civil War, Oxford.Google Scholar
Condren, Conal (2006), Argument and authority in early modern England, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, Thompson, revised by Wright, Stephen (2004), ‘Bayly, Thomas (d. c. 1657), Church of England clergyman and Roman Catholic controversialist’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Corns, Thomas N. (1995), ‘Milton and the characteristics of a free commonwealth’, in Armitage, David, Himy, Armand and Skinner, Quentin eds., Milton and republicanism, Cambridge, 2542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crawford, Patricia (1977), ‘Charles Stuart, that man of blood’, Journal of British Studies, 16, 4161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cressy, David (2010), Dangerous talk. Scandalous, seditious, and treasonable speech in pre-modern England, Oxford.Google Scholar
Cromartie, Alan (2016), ‘Parliamentary sovereignty, popular sovereignty, and Henry Parker’s adjucative standpoint’, in Bourke, Richard and Skinner, Quentin eds., Popular sovereignty in historical perspective, Cambridge, 142–63.Google Scholar
Curry, Patrick (1989), Prophecy and power. Astrology in early modern England, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Cuttica, Cesare (2012), Sir Robert Filmer (1588–1653) and the patriotic monarch. Patriarchalism in seventeenth-century political thought, Manchester.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cuttica, Cesare (2022), Anti-democracy in England 1570–1642, Oxford.Google Scholar
Davis, J. C. (1982), ‘Radicalism in a traditional society: the evaluation of radical thought in the English commonwealth 1649–1660’, History of Political Thought, 3, 193213.Google Scholar
De Krey, Gary S. (2017), Following the Levellers, volume one: political and religious radicals in the English Civil War and Revolution, 1645–1649, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Krey, Gary S. (2018), Following the Levellers, volume two: English political and religious radicals from the Commonwealth to the Glorious Revolution, 1649–1688, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donoghue, John (2013), Fire under the ashes. An Atlantic history of the English Revolution, Chicago.Google Scholar
Douglas, Robin (2015), ‘Thomas Hobbes’s changing account of liberty and challenge to republicanism’, History of Political Thought, 36, 281309.Google Scholar
Dunn, John (2005), Setting the people free. The story of democracy, London.Google Scholar
Dymond, Jeffrey (2021), ‘Human character and the formation of the state: reconsidering Machiavelli and Polybius 6’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 82, 2950.Google Scholar
Dzelzainis, Martin (1991), ‘Introduction’, in John Milton, Political writings, ed. Dzelzainis, Martin, Cambridge, ixxxv.Google Scholar
Dzelzainis, Martin (1995), ‘Milton’s classical republicanism’, in Armitage, David, Himy, Armand and Skinner, Quentin eds., Milton and republicanism, Cambridge, 324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dzelzainis, Martin (1999), ‘“Incendiaries of the state”: Charles I and tyranny’, in Corns, Thomas N. ed., The royal image. Representations of Charles I, Cambridge, 7595.Google Scholar
Dzelzainis, Martin (2002), ‘Anti-monarchism in English republicanism’, in van Gelderen, Martin and Skinner, Quentin eds., Republicanism. A shared European heritage, Cambrigde, vol. I, 2741.Google Scholar
Fallon, Stephen M. (2009), ‘“The strangest piece of reason”: Milton’s Tenure of kings and magistrates’, in McDowell, Nicholas and Smith, Nigel eds., The Oxford handbook of Milton, Oxford, 241–51.Google Scholar
Fallon, Stephen M. (2012), ‘Nascent republican theory in Milton’s regicide prose’, in Knoppers, Laura Lunger ed., The Oxford handbook of literature and the English Revolution, Oxford, 309–26.Google Scholar
Farr, David (2006), Henry Ireton and the English Revolution, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Farr, David (2014), Major-General Thomas Harrison. Millenarianism, fifth monarchism and the English Revolution 1616–1660, Farnham.Google Scholar
Fink, Zera (1945), The classical republicans. An essay on the recovery of a pattern of thought in seventeenth-century England, Evanston.Google Scholar
Fitzgibbons, Jonathan (2017), ‘Rethinking the English Revolution 1649’, Historical Journal, 60, 889914.Google Scholar
Fitzgibbons, Jonathan (2018), Cromwell’s House of Lords. Politics, parliaments and constitutional revolution, 1642–1660, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Foxley, Rachel (2012), ‘Freedom of conscience and the Agreements of the people’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot eds., The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 117–38.Google Scholar
Foxley, Rachel (2013a), ‘Democracy in 1659: Harrington and the good old cause’, in Taylor, Stephen and Tapsell, Grant eds., The nature of the English Revolution revisited, Woodbridge, 175–96.Google Scholar
Foxley, Rachel (2013b), ‘“Due libertie and proportioned equalitie”: Milton, democracy and the republican tradition’, History of Political Thought, 34, 614–38.Google Scholar
Foxley, Rachel (2013c), The Levellers. Radical political thought in the English Revolution, Manchester.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foxley, Rachel (2013d), ‘Marchamont Nedham and mystery of state’, in Mahlberg, Gaby and Wiemann, Dirk eds., European contexts for English republicanism, Farnham, 4962.Google Scholar
Foxley, Rachel (2019), ‘The Levellers and the English constitution in the English Civil War’, in Foronda, François and Genet, Jean-Philippe eds., Des chartes aux constitutions: Autour de l’idée constitutionnelle en Europe (XIIe–XVIIe siècle), Paris, 381400.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freist, Dagmar (1997), Governed by opinion. Politics, religion and the dynamics of communication in Stuart London 1637–1645, London.Google Scholar
Friedman, Jerome (1993), Miracles and the pulp press during the English Revolution, London.Google Scholar
Gardiner, S. R. (1894), History of the great civil war, 4 vols., London.Google Scholar
Gardiner, S. R. (1903), History of the Commonwealth and Protectorate, 3 vols., London.Google Scholar
Gentles, Ian (1992), The new model army in England, Ireland and Scotland, 1645–1653, Oxford.Google Scholar
Gentles, Ian (2001), ‘The Agreement of the people and their political contexts, 1647–1649’, in Mendle, Michael ed., The Putney debates of 1647. The army, the Levellers, and the English state, Cambridge, 148–74.Google Scholar
Gentles, Ian (2009), ‘The politics of Fairfax’s army, 1645–49’, in Adamson, John ed., The English Civil War, Basingstoke, 175201.Google Scholar
Gentles, Ian (2012), ‘The new model army and the constitutional crisis of the late 1640s’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot eds., The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 139–62.Google Scholar
Gianoutsos, Jamie A. (2021), The rule of manhood. Tyranny, gender, and classical republicanism in England, 1603–1660, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gibson, Kenneth (2004), ‘Homes [Holmes], Nathaniel (1599–1678), Independent divine’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Goldie, Mark (2001), ‘The unacknowledged republic: officeholding in early modern England’, in Harris, Tim ed., The politics of excluded, c. 1500–1850, Basingstoke, 153–94.Google Scholar
Greaves, Richard L. (2004), ‘Peyton, Sir Edward’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Greenberg, Janelle (2001), The radical face of the ancient constitution. St Edward’s ‘laws’ in early modern political thought, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenspan, Nicole (2012), Selling Cromwell’s wars, London.Google Scholar
Gurney, John (1997), ‘George Wither and Surrey politics’, Southern History, 19, 7498.Google Scholar
Gurney, John (2007), Brave community. The Digger movement in the English Revolution, Manchester.Google Scholar
Guscott, S. J. (2004), ‘Eaton, Samuel’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Alastair (2004), ‘An unlikely friendship: Robert Sheringham and the Cawton family’, in van Dijkhuizen, Jan Frans et al. eds., Living in posterity. Essays in honour of Bart Westerveel, Hilversum, 133–8.Google Scholar
Hammersley, Rachel (2019), James Harrington. An intellectual biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Hankins, James (2010), ‘Exclusivist republicans and the non-monarchical republic’, Political Theory, 38, 452–82.Google Scholar
Hankins, James (2016), ‘Europe’s First Democrat? Cyriac of Ancona and Book 6 of Polybius’, in Blair, Ann and Goeing, Anja-Silvia eds., For the Sake of Learning, 2 vols., Leiden, ii, 692710.Google Scholar
Hanson, Donald W. (1970), From kingdom to commonwealth. The development of civic consciousness in English political thought, Cambridge, MA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helmers, Helmer J. (2015), The royalist republic. Literature, politics, and religion in the Anglo-Dutch public sphere, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Henderson, Frances (2012), ‘Drafting the officers’ Agreement of the people, 1648–49: a reappraisal’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Eliot eds., The Agreements of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 163–94.Google Scholar
Hewitt, Virginia (2004), ‘Potter, William’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Hill, Christopher (1975), The world turned upside down. Radical ideas during the English Revolution, Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
Hoekstra, Kinch (2004), ‘The de facto turn in Hobbes’s political philosophy’, in Sorell, Tom and Foisneau, Luc eds., Leviathan after 350 years, Oxford, 3374.Google Scholar
Holmes, Clive (2010), ‘The trial and execution of Charles I’, Historical Journal, 53, 289316.Google Scholar
Holmes, Clive (2019), ‘The remonstrance of the army and the execution of Charles I’, History, 104, 585605.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hughes, Ann (1987), Politics, society and civil war in Warwickshire, 1620–1660, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hughes, Ann (1993), ‘Godly reformation and its opponents in Warwickshire, 1640–1662’, Dugdale Society Occasional Papers, 35.Google Scholar
Hughes, Ann (2012), ‘Diggers, true Levellers and the crisis of the English Revolution’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot eds., The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 218–38.Google Scholar
Innes, M. J. M. (2019), ‘Robert Persons, popular sovereignty, and the late Elizabethan succession debate’, Historical Journal, 62, 5776.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jack, Sybil M. (2004), ‘Parker, John (fl. 1631–1680), judge’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Jacob, James R. (1983), Henry Stubbe, radical Protestantism and the early Enlightenment, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johns, Adrian (1998), The nature of the book. Print and knowledge in the making, Chicago.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jordan, W. K. (1942), Men of substance. A study of the thought of two English revolutionaries Henry Parker and Henry Robinson, Chicago.Google Scholar
Judson, Margaret A. (1980), From tradition to political reality. A study of the ideas set forth in support of the commonwealth government in England, 1649–1653, Hamden, CT.Google Scholar
Keane, John (2009), The life and death of democracy, London.Google Scholar
Kelsey, Sean (1997), Inventing a republic. The political culture of the English Commonwealth 1649–1653, Stanford, CA.Google Scholar
Kelsey, Sean (2001), ‘Staging the trial of Charles I’, in Peacey, Jason ed., The regicides and the execution of Charles I, Basingstoke, 7193.Google Scholar
Kelsey, Sean (2002), ‘The death of Charles I’, Historical Journal, 45, 727–54.Google Scholar
Kelsey, Sean (2003a), ‘The ordinance for the trial of Charles I’, Historical Research, 76, 310–31.Google Scholar
Kelsey, Sean (2003b), ‘The trial of Charles I’, English Historical Review, 118, 583616.Google Scholar
Kelsey, Sean (2004), ‘Politics and procedure in the trial of Charles I’, Law and History Review, 22, 125.Google Scholar
Kelsey, Sean (2018), ‘A riposte to Clive Holmes, “The trial and execution of Charles I”’, History, 103, 525–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kershaw, R. N. (1923), ‘The recruiting of the long parliament, 1645–47’, History, 8, 169–79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Killeen, Kevin (2017), The political Bible in early modern England, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Lake, Peter (2004), ‘The king (the queen), and the Jesuit’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 14, 243–60.Google Scholar
Lee, Daniel (2016), Popular sovereignty in early modern constitutional thought, Oxford.Google Scholar
Liu, Tai (2004), ‘Goodwin, John (c. 1594–1665), Independent minister’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Mahlberg, Gaby (2009), Henry Neville and English republican culture in the seventeenth century, Manchester.Google Scholar
Malcolm, Noel (2012), ‘General introduction’, in Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan, ed. Malcolm, Noel, 3 vols., Oxford, i, 1195.Google Scholar
Maloy, J. S. (2008), The colonial American origins of modern democratic thought, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Maloy, J. S. (2017), ‘Bodin’s puritan readers and radical democracy in early New England’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 78, 125.Google Scholar
Manin, Bernard (1997), The principles of representative government, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Manning, Brian (1992), 1649. The crisis of the English Revolution, London.Google Scholar
Mayers, Ruth E. (2004), 1659. The crisis of the commonwealth, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
McCormick, John P. (2011), Machiavellian democracy, Cambridge.Google Scholar
McDiarmid, John F., ed. (2007), The monarchical republic of early modern England. Essays in response to Patrick Collinson, Aldershot.Google Scholar
McElligott, Jason (2007), Royalism, print and censorship in revolutionary England, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Mendle, Michael (1985), Dangerous positions. Mixed government, the estates of the realm, and the Answer to the xix propositions, n.p.Google Scholar
Mendle, Michael (1995), Henry Parker and the English Civil War. The political thought of the public’s ‘privado’, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Mendle, Michael, ed. (2001), The Putney debates. The army, the Levellers and the English state, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Momigliano, Arnaldo (1974), ‘Polybius’ reappearance in Western Europe’, in Polybe, Genève, 345–72.Google Scholar
Moore, John M. (1965), The manuscript tradition of Polybius, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Morgan, Edmund S. (1988), Inventing the people. The rise of popular sovereignty in England and America, New York.Google Scholar
Morrill, John and Baker, Philip (2001a), ‘The case of the armie truly re-stated’, in Mendle, Michael ed., The Putney debates of 1647. The army, the Levellers and the English state, Cambridge, 103–24.Google Scholar
Morrill, John and Baker, Philip (2001b), ‘Oliver Cromwell, the regicide and the sons of Zeruiah’, in Peacey, Jason ed., The regicides and the execution of Charles I, Basingstoke, 1435.Google Scholar
Mortimer, Sarah (2010), Reason and religion in the English Revolution. The challenge of Socinianism, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mull, Nathanael (2018), ‘Divine right and secular constitutionalism: the Jesuit-absolutist debates, 1580–1620’, History of Political Thought, 39, 606–33.Google Scholar
Nederman, Cary J. (2016), ‘Polybius as monarchist? Receptions of Histories VI before Machiavelli, c.1490–c.1515’, History of Political Thought, 37, 461–79.Google Scholar
Nelson, Eric (2004), The Greek tradition in republican thought, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Nelson, Eric (2010), The Hebrew republic. Jewish sources and the transformation of European political thought, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Nelson, Eric (2014), The royalist revolution. Monarchy and the American founding, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Nicholls, Sophie (2019), ‘Sovereignty and government in Jean Bodin’s Six livres de la république’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 80, 4766.Google Scholar
Nippel, Wilfried (2015), Ancient and modern democracy. Two concepts of liberty?, trans. Tribe, Keith, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Norbrook, David (1999), Writing the English Republic. Poetry, rhetoric and politics, 1627–1660, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Nyquist, Mary (2013), Arbitrary rule. Slavery, tyranny, and the power of life and death, Chicago.Google Scholar
Orr, D. Alan (2001), ‘The juristic foundation of regicide’, in Peacey, Jason ed., The regicides and the execution of Charles I, Basingstoke, 117–37.Google Scholar
Orr, D. Alan (2002), Treason and the state. Law, politics and ideology in the English Civil War, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Orr, D. Alan (2011), ‘Law, liberty, and the English Civil War: John Lilburne’s prison experience, the Levellers and freedom’, in Braddick, Michael J. and Smith, David L. eds., The experience of revolution in Stuart Britain and Ireland. Essays for John Morrill, Cambridge, 154–71.Google Scholar
Orr, D. Alan (2012), ‘Constitutionalism: ancient, modern and early modern in the Agreements of the people’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot eds., The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 7696.Google Scholar
Parker, Kim Ian (2015), ‘“A king like other nations”: political theory and the Hebrew republic in the early modern age’, in Killeen, Kevin, Smith, Helen and Willie, Rachel eds., The Oxford handbook of the Bible in early modern England, c. 1530–1700, Oxford, 384–96.Google Scholar
Parkin, Jon (2007), Taming the Leviathan, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Peacey, Jason (2000), ‘John Lilburne and the Long Parliament’, Historical Journal, 43, 625–45.Google Scholar
Peacey, Jason (2001), ‘Reporting a revolution: a failed propaganda campaign’, in Peacey, Jason ed., The regicides and the execution of Charles I, Basingstoke, 161–80.Google Scholar
Peacey, Jason (2009), ‘Perceptions of parliament: factions and “the public” ’, in Adamson, John ed., The English Civil War, Basingstoke, 82105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peacey, Jason (2012), ‘The people of the Agreements: the Levellers, civil war radicalism and political participation’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot eds., The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 5075.Google Scholar
Peacey, Jason (2013), Print and public politics in the English Revolution, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Peacey, Jason (2016), Politicians and pamphleteers. Propaganda during the English Civil Wars and interregnum, Abingdon. (Originally published in 2004.)Google Scholar
Pedullà, Gabriele (2020), ‘Humanist republicanism: towards a new paradigm’, History of Political Thought, 41, 4395.Google Scholar
Peltonen, Markku (1995), Classical humanism and republicanism in English political thought 1570–1640, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peltonen, Markku (2019), ‘“All government is in the people, from the people, and for the people”: democracy in the English Revolution’, in Cuttica, Cesare and Peltonen, Markku eds., Democracy and anti-democracy in early modern England 1603–1689, Leiden, 6687.Google Scholar
Peltonen, Markku (2022), ‘Democracy and representation in early modern England, 1531–1653’, History of Political Thought, 43.Google Scholar
Phillips, C. B. (2012), ‘A Cheshire memorial brass of 1657: Adam Martindale and Ephraim Elcock’, Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, 160, 126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pincus, Steven C. A. (1996), Protestantism and patriotism. Ideologies and the making of English foreign policy, 1650–1668, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Pincus, Steve (1998), ‘Neither Machiavellian moment nor possessive individualism: commercial society and the defenders of the English Commonwealth’, American Historical Review, 103, 705–36.Google Scholar
Pocock, J. G. A. (1975), The Machiavellian moment. Florentine political thought and the Atlantic republican tradition, Princeton.Google Scholar
Pocock, John and Schochet, Gordon J. (1993), ‘Interregnum and Restoration’, in Pocock, J. G. A. ed., The varieties of British political thought, 1500–1800, Cambridge, 146–79.Google Scholar
Polizzotto, Carolyn (2014), ‘What really happened at the Whitehall debates? A new source’, Historical Journal, 57, 3351.Google Scholar
Polizzotto, Carolyn (2016), ‘Speaking truth and power: the problem of authority in the Whitehall debates of 1648–9’, English Historical Review, 131, 3163.Google Scholar
Rahe, Paul A. (2008), Against throne and altar. Machiavelli and political theory under the English Republic, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Raymond, Joad (1996), The invention of the newspaper. English newsbook, 1641–1649, Oxford.Google Scholar
Raymond, Joad (1998), ‘John Streater and The grand politick informer’, Historical Journal, 41, 567–74.Google Scholar
Raymond, Joad (2012), ‘Marchamont Nedham’, in Knoppers, Laura Lunger ed., The Oxford handbook of literature and the English Revolution, Oxford, 375–93.Google Scholar
Rees, John (2016), The Leveller revolution, London.Google Scholar
Roberts, Clayton (1966), The growth of responsible government in Stuart England, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Roberts, Stephen K. (2004), ‘Erbery [Erbury], William’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Robertson, Geoffrey (2005), The tyrannicide brief. The story of the man who sent Charles I to the scaffold, London.Google Scholar
Sabbadini, Lorenzo (2016), ‘Popular sovereignty and representation in the English Civil War’, in Bourke, Richard and Skinner, Quentin eds., Popular sovereignty in historical perspective, Cambridge, 164–86.Google Scholar
Sampson, Joyce (2004), ‘Sedgwick, William (bap. 1609, d. 1663/4), religious and political controversialist’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Sanderson, John (1989), But the people’s creatures’. The philosophical basis of the English Civil War, Manchester.Google Scholar
Schultz, Karie (2021), ‘Catholic political thought and Calvinist ecclesiology in Samel Rutherford’s Lex, rex (1644)’, Journal of British Studies, 61, 162–84.Google Scholar
Scott, Jonathan (1992), ‘The English republican imagination’, in Morrill, John ed., Revolution and restoration, London, 3554.Google Scholar
Scott, Jonathan (2000), England’s troubles. Seventeenth-century English political instability in European context, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Scott, Jonathan (2002), ‘Classical republicanism in seventeenth-century England and the Netherlands’, in van Gelderen, Martin and Skinner, Quentin eds., Republicanism. A shared European heritage, 2 vols., Cambridge, i, 6181.Google Scholar
Scott, Jonathan (2004), Commonwealth principles. Republican writing of the English Revolution, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Scott, Jonathan (2011), ‘James Harrington’s prescription for healing and settling’, in Braddick, Michael J. and Smith, David L. eds., The experience of revolution in Stuart Britain and Ireland. Essays for John Morrill, Cambridge, 190209.Google Scholar
Shagan, Ethan H. (2011), The rule of moderation. Violence, religion and the politics of restraint in early modern England, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Sharp, Andrew (2001), ‘The Levellers and the end of Charles I’, in Peacey, Jason ed., The regicides and the execution of Charles I, Basingstoke, 181201.Google Scholar
Sharpe, Kevin (1998), ‘“An image doting rabble”: the failure of republican culture in seventeenth-century England’, in Sharpe, Kevin and Zwicker, Steven N. eds., Refiguring revolutions. Aesthetics and politics from the English Revolution to the romantic revolution, Berkeley, 2556.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharpe, Kevin (2010), Image wars. Promoting kings and commonwealths in England, 1603–1660, New Haven.Google Scholar
Sharpe, Kevin (2013), Reading authority and representing rule in early modern England, London.Google Scholar
Sharpe, Kevin and Zwicker, Steven (1998), ‘Introduction: refiguring revolutions’, in Sharpe, Kevin and Zwicker, Steven N. eds., Refiguring revolutions. Aesthetics and politics from the English Revolution to the romantic revolution, Berkeley, 121.Google Scholar
Skinner, Quentin (1966), ‘The ideological context of Hobbes’s political thought’, Historical Journal, 9, 286317.Google Scholar
Skinner, Quentin (1972), ‘Conquest and consent: Thomas Hobbes and the Engagement controversy’, in Aylmer, G. E. ed., The Interregnum. The quest for settlement 1646–1660, London, 7998.Google Scholar
Skinner, Quentin (1978), The foundations of modern political thought, 2 vols., Cambridge.Google Scholar
Skinner, Quentin (1998), Liberty before liberalism, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Skinner, Quentin (2002), Visions of politics, 3 vols., Cambridge.Google Scholar
Skinner, Quentin (2005), ‘Hobbes on representation’, European Journal of Philosophy, 13, 155184.Google Scholar
Skinner, Quentin (2006), ‘Rethinking political liberty’, History Workshop Journal, 61, 156–70.Google Scholar
Skinner, Quentin (2008), Hobbes and republican liberty, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Skinner, Quentin (2018), From humanism to Hobbes. Studies in rhetoric and politics, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Smith, David L. (2012), ‘The Agreements of the people and the constitutions of the interregnum governments’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot eds., The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 239–61.Google Scholar
Smith, Nigel (1989), Perfection proclaimed. Language and literature in English radical religion 1640–1660, Oxford.Google Scholar
Smith, Nigel (1994), Literature and revolution in England 1640–1660, New Haven.Google Scholar
Smith, Nigel (1995), ‘Popular republicanism in the 1650s: John Streater’s “heroick mechanicks”’, in Armitage, David, Himy, Armand and Skinner, Quentin eds., Milton and republicanism, Cambridge, 137–55.Google Scholar
Smith, Nigel (2004), ‘Salmon, Joseph (fl. 1647–1656), Ranter’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography.Google Scholar
Sommerville, J. P. (1999), Royalists and patriots. Politics and ideology in England 1603–1640, Harlow.Google Scholar
Sommerville, Johann (2011), ‘The social contract (contract of government)’, in Klosko, George ed., The Oxford handbook of the history of political philosophy, Oxford, 573–85.Google Scholar
Sommerville, Johann P. (2012), ‘Early modern absolutism in practice and theory’, in Cuttica, Cesare and Burgess, Glenn eds., Monarchism and absolutism in early modern Europe, London, 117–30.Google Scholar
Spurr, John (2004), ‘Barlow, Thomas’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Straumann, Benjamin (2016), Crisis and constitutionalism. Roman political thought from the Republic to the age of revolution, New York.Google Scholar
Sullivan, Vickie B. (2004), Machiavelli, Hobbes, & the formation of a liberal republicanism in England, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Taft, Barbara (1979) ‘Voting lists of the council of officers, December 1648’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, 52, 138–54.Google Scholar
Taft, Barbara (1985) ‘The council of officers’ Agreement of the people’, Historical Journal, 28, 169–85.Google Scholar
Taft, Barbara (2001), ‘From Reading to Whitehall: Henry Ireton’s journey’, in Mendle, Michael ed., The Putney debates of 1647. The army, the Levellers, and the English state, Cambridge, 175–93.Google Scholar
Tahvanainen, Antti (2012), Rhetoric and public speech in English republicanism 1642–1681, Helsinki.Google Scholar
Taipale, Antti (2021), ‘Religion and the battlefield in the first English Civil War (1642–1646): instructing soldiers and dehumanizing enemies’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of Helsinki.Google Scholar
Tomkins, Adam (2005), Our republican constitution, Oxford.Google Scholar
Tubb, Amos (2004), ‘Printing the regicide of Charles I’, History, 89, 500–24.Google Scholar
Tubb, Amos (2012), ‘Independent presses: the politics of print in England during the late 1640s’, Seventeenth Century, 27, 287312.Google Scholar
Tubb, Amos (2016), ‘The Engagement controversy: a victory for the English Republic’, Historical Research, 89, 4261.Google Scholar
Tuck, Richard (1993), Philosophy and government 1572–1651, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Tuck, Richard (2016), The sleeping sovereign. The invention of modern democracy, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Underdown, David (1968), ‘Party management in the recruiter elections, 1645–1648’, English Historical Review, 83, 235–64.Google Scholar
Underdown, David (1971), Pride’s purge. Politics in the puritan revolution, Oxford.Google Scholar
Underdown, David (1985), Revel, riot, and rebellion. Popular politics and culture in England 1603–1660, Oxford.Google Scholar
Urbinati, Nadia (2006), Representative democracy. Principles and genealogy, Chicago.Google Scholar
Vallance, Edward (2001), ‘Oaths, casuistry, and equivocation: Anglican responses to the Engagement controversy’, Historical Journal, 44, 5977.Google Scholar
Vallance, Edward (2005), Revolutionary England and the national covenant. State oaths, Protestantism and the political nation, 1553–1682, Woodbridge.Google Scholar
Vallance, Edward (2012), ‘Oaths, covenants, associations and the origins of the Agreements of the people: the road to and from Putney’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot eds., The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 2849.Google Scholar
Vallance, Edward (2021), ‘Testimony, tyranny and treason: the witnesses at Charles I’s trial’, English Historical Review, 136, xx–xx.Google Scholar
Veall, Donald (1970), The popular movement for law reform 1640–1660, Oxford.Google Scholar
Vernon, Elliot (2001), ‘The quarrel of the Covenant: the London Presbyterians and the regicide’, in Peacey, Jason ed., The regicides and the execution of Charles I, Basingstoke, 202–24.Google Scholar
Vernon, Elliot (2012), ‘“A firme and present peace; upon grounds of common right and freedome”: the debate on the Agreements of the people and the crisis of the constitution, 1647–59’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot eds., The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 195217.Google Scholar
Vernon, Elliot and Baker, Philip (2010), ‘What was the first Agreement of the people? ’, Historical Journal, 53, 3959.Google Scholar
Vernon, Elliot and Baker, Philip (2012), ‘Introduction: the history and historiography of the Agreements of the people’, in Baker, Philip and Vernon, Elliot eds., The Agreement of the people, the Levellers and the constitutional crisis of the English Revolution, Basingstoke, 127.Google Scholar
Wallace, John M. (1964), ‘The Engagement controversy 1649–1652: A annotated list of pamphlets’, Bulletin of the New York Public Library, 68, 384405.Google Scholar
Wallace, John M. (1968), Destiny his choice. The loyalism of Andrew Marvell, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Walsh, Ashley (2018), ‘John Streater and the Saxon republic’, History of Political Thought, 39, 5782.Google Scholar
Webster, Charles (1975), The great instauration. Science, medicine and reform 1626–1660, London.Google Scholar
Wood, Ellen Meiksins (2012), Liberty & property. A social history of Western political thought from Renaissance to Enlightenment, London.Google Scholar
Woolrych, Austin (1982), Commonwealth to Protectorate, London.Google Scholar
Woolrych, Austin (1987), Soldiers and statesmen. The general council of the army and its debates 1647–1648, Oxford.Google Scholar
Woolrych, Austin (2001), ‘The debates from the perspective of the army’, in Mendle, Michael ed., The Putney debates of 1647. The army, the Levellers, and the English state, Cambridge, 5378.Google Scholar
Woolrych, Austin (2002), Britain in revolution, Oxford.Google Scholar
Wootton, David (1986), ‘Introduction’, in Wootton, David ed., Divine right and democracy. An anthology of political writing in Stuart England, Harmondsworth, 2186.Google Scholar
Wootton, David (1990), ‘From rebellion to revolution: the crisis of the winter 1642/3 and the origins of civil war radicalism’, English Historical Review, 105, 654–69.Google Scholar
Wootton, David (1991), ‘Leveller democracy and the puritan revolution’, in Burns, J. H. and Goldie, Mark eds., The Cambridge history of political thought 1450–1700, Cambridge, 412–42.Google Scholar
Wootton, David (1992), ‘The Levellers’, in Dunn, John ed., Democracy. The unfinished journey 508 BC to AD 1993, Oxford, 7189.Google Scholar
Wootton, David (1994), ‘Introduction: the republican tradition: from commonwealth to common sense’, in Wootton, David ed., Republicanism, liberty, and commercial society 1649–1776, Stanford, 141.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (1974), The Rump parliament 1648–1653, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (1981), ‘Classical republicanism and the puritan revolution’, in Lloyd-Jones, Hugh, Pearl, Valerie and Worden, Blair eds., History and imagination, London, 182200.Google Scholar
Worde, Blair (1985), ‘The commonwealth kidney of Algernon Sidney’, Journal of British Studies, 24, 140.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (1990), ‘Milton’s republicanism and the tyranny of heaven’, in Bock, Gisela, Skinner, Quentin and Viroli, Maurizio eds., Machiavelli and republicanism, Cambridge, 225–45.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (1991), ‘English republicanism’, in Burns, J. H. and Goldie, Mark eds., The Cambridge history of political thought 1450–1700, Cambridge, 443–75.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (1994a), ‘Marchamont Nedham and the beginnings of English republicanism, 1649–1656’, in Wootton, David ed., Republicanism, liberty, and commercial society 1649–1776, Stanford, CA, 4581.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (1994b), ‘James Harrington and “The commonwealth of Oceana,” 1656’, in Wootton, David ed., Republicanism, liberty, and commercial society 1649–1776, Stanford, CA, 82110.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (1994c), ‘Harrington’s “Oceana”: origins and aftermath, 1651–1660’, in Wootton, David ed., Republicanism, liberty, and commercial society 1649–1776, Stanford, CA, 111–38.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (1994d), ‘Republicanism and the Restoration, 1660–1683’, in Wootton, David ed., Republicanism, liberty, and commercial society 1649–1776, Stanford, CA, 139–93.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (1995), ‘Milton and Marchamont Nedham’, in Armitage, David, Himy, Armand and Skinner, Quentin eds., Milton and republicanism, Cambridge, 156–80.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (2002), ‘Republicanism, regicide and republic: the English experience’, in van Gelderen, Martin and Skinner, Quentin eds., Republicanism. A shared European heritage, 2 vols., Cambridge, i, 307–27.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (2007), Literature and politics in Cromwellian England, Oxford.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (2011), ‘Introduction’, in Nedham, Marchamont, The excellencie of a free state, Indianapolis, xvcii.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (2012), God’s instruments. Political conduct in the England of Oliver Cromwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Worden, Blair (2013), ‘Liberty for export: “republicanism” in England, 1500–1800’, in Mahlberg, Gaby and Wiemann, Dirk eds., European contexts for English republicanism, Farnham, 1332.Google Scholar
Wright, Stephen (2004a), ‘Bartlet, William’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Wright, Stephen (2004b), ‘Collier, Thomas’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Young, John T. (2004), ‘Durie [Dury], John’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar
Zagorin, Perez (1954), A history of political thought in the English Revolution, London.Google Scholar
Zaller, Robert (2004), ‘Robinson, Henry (bap. 1605, d. 1673), merchant and law reformer’, in Oxford dictionary of national biography, Oxford.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Markku Peltonen, University of Helsinki
  • Book: The Political Thought of the English Free State, 1649–1653
  • Online publication: 13 October 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009212090.008
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Markku Peltonen, University of Helsinki
  • Book: The Political Thought of the English Free State, 1649–1653
  • Online publication: 13 October 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009212090.008
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Markku Peltonen, University of Helsinki
  • Book: The Political Thought of the English Free State, 1649–1653
  • Online publication: 13 October 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009212090.008
Available formats
×