Abstract
The capture of Cadiz in 1596 was a spectacular but short-lived
success in England's
war against Spain. More enduring were the many partisan accounts of the
victory, which were
prepared and disseminated by various officers from the expedition. This
article traces these rival
narratives and explores their circulation in manuscript form, including
the earl of Essex's notorious
‘True relacion’. Such documents illustrate the increasingly
bitter divisions of late Elizabethan
politics. The stories of Cadiz gained a fresh currency when England and
Spain went to war again in
the 1620s, placing a heavy burden of expectation on the government of Charles
I.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
22 articles.
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