A European Crisis? Functional Breakdown and Multiple Kingdoms
Publisher
Macmillan Education UK
Reference14 articles.
1. For a lively discussion of patronage see Linda Levy Peck, ‘“For a King not to be bountiful were a fault”: Perspectives on Court Patronage in Early Stuart England’’, Journal of British Studies, 25 (1986), pp. 31–61.
2. D. M. Hirst, ‘The Privy Council and Problems of Enforcement in the 1620s’, Journal of British Studies, 18 (1978), pp. 46–66.
3. For the general account see Prestwich, Thomas and Smith as in n.7 above; T. E. Cogswell, ‘A Low Road to Extinction? Supply and Redress of Grievances in the Parliaments of the 1620s’, Historical Journal, 33 (1990), pp. 283–303.
4. Eric Lindquist, ‘The Failure of the Great Contract’, Journal of Modern History, 57 (1985), pp. 617–51
5. For general discussions, see Smuts, ‘Introduction’, in his Stuart Court and Europe; M. Greengrass (ed.), Conquest and Coalescence: The Shaping of the State in Early Modern Europe (London, 1991); J. H. Elliott, ‘A World of Composite Monarchies’, Past and Present, 137 (1992), pp. 48–71