A tour de force... - Rated 
What caused the English Civil War is a question which had already begun to exercise historians while powder smoke still lingered on the battlefields, and which exercises them still. The debate has been long, acrimonious, and fascinating--and indeed its duration has sometimes been an embarrassment to historians (Marc Bloch's reprimand that they would get more done if `they spent less time compiling honour rolls and more time writing notebooks' comes to mind). That embarrassment may be coming to an end. Certainly, whatever developments may yet take place in this field, the engagement with archival sources that historians have undertaken in the last 30-odd years can only mean that we are getting closer to the truth. John Adamson's new book is a product of this engagement, and directs the reader's attention to hitherto under-explored aspects of the Civil War.
Before looking at the argument of Noble Revolt, the book merits some general comments. For a start, it is compulsively readable: dramatic set-pieces evoke a vivid sense of place to rival and surpass the work of Simon Schama or Mark Kishlansky. The pathos of the description of Strafford's trial and execution recalls Carlyle. So, given the size of the tome (c.200 pages of endnotes make the volume deceptively large), the chances are that your arms will give in long before your brain. These set-pieces enliven a grand-narrative which fluidly synthesises description and analysis without recourse to the rather wooden thematic chapters on `social conditions' etc. sometimes found interspersed in books which attempt a narrative approach. Perhaps the best thing about this is that events simply make sense when presented in their real chronological and geographical location. And while the work will surely mean more to someone familiar with the debate, it does stand alone--partly because it is so easy to read. When historians are mentioned (principally Russell, Gardiner, and in the epilogue the `revisionist' school as a whole) quotations are liberally provided. In other (rather modish) words, it's accessible.
The thesis which Adamson advances here, and which has been the basis of his academic career, is that it is helpful to think of the English Civil War as a `baronial revolt'. It is stated more circumspectly than hitherto in Noble Revolt, which may disappoint those seeking the radically contrarian--but it is probably better that when Adamson disclaims that the `baronial context' of the revolt was `but one of many' we should feel not that he's overstating the case but rather the opposite. That you will probably think the latter rather than the former is indeed a testament to the book's success.
The general argument is that the central importance of the nobility in precipitating the English Civil War has been overlooked by historians (who have often searched for the motor of events in the actions of the lower classes). A group of `godly' noblemen of Puritan leanings were profoundly dissatisfied with the government of Charles I, which both denied them a role in the administration which they felt they deserved (favouring rather the low-born but efficient, like Strafford and Laud) and advanced a religious doctrine which they abhorred. The Scottish Crisis of 1637 gave these noblemen the chance they had been waiting for--and it came just in time, for peers like Saye and Brooke had been seriously considering emigrating to Connecticut (which gives some impression of their depth of feeling). A group of seven peers invited the Scots to invade, committing treason in the process, and thereafter embarked on a `prolonged, ruthless and at times breathtakingly successful campaign against the royal prerogative'--for the king had to be limited if they were to preserve their constitutional innovations and indeed their personal safety.
This Junto in the Lords was intimately connected with the Junto in the Commons which is portrayed in many accounts as the driving force behind demands for reform. Adamson has retreated a little from his claims that MPs like Pym and St John were simply the `men of business' of aristocratic puppet-masters, and the importance of the Commons is not neglected; the actions of individuals are explained as such rather than forced into a predetermined mould whereby nobles lead or vice versa. For instance, St John's role in ensuring the failure of a Bedfordian compromise which would have saved Strafford's life in return for royal concessions is catalogued in detail--and the fact that Bedford himself was one of St John's patrons is not ignored. And it is striking how such MPs were often intimately involved in circles of patronage, religion and business headed by noblemen--even family connections appear with a frequency which should perhaps be less surprising. Interesting light is shone on the role of organisations like the Providence Island Company and the Honourable Artillery Company as centres where opposition to Charles fermented. Adamson marshals compelling evidence to support his thesis.
An important question with which Noble Revolt wrestles is whether this was a conflict of religion or politics. Adamson's general conclusion seems to be that it was both, and indeed that it is misleading to try to separate the two. But he also counsels against ignoring politics. Contrary to `revisionist' doxa, he suggests that the rebels did have a constitutional agenda of some sort, and that the changes were intended to be permanent, rather than mere temporary expedients designed to shackle an insupportable king. To support this argument he describes how the Junto repeatedly `blew hot and cold' on matters of religion, sometimes advocating root and branch reform as a gesture to sweeten their Scottish allies; sometimes renouncing iconoclastic legislation when it seemed to be generating too much hostility to Parliament throughout the nation. But this all becomes rather complicated if one considers that arguably the Junto was ultimately motivated by religion: so religion played second fiddle to political manoeuvring, but the Junto's political goals were determined by religion. The question of quite what was causing what is imposing, and may even been impossible to answer; perhaps the best solution is to simply restate the inseparability of religion and politics. But I don't think Adamson is really satisfied with this.
In any case, it is pleasing that he has to wrestle with this question: for all Adamson's dominance of the field, there is nothing glib about Noble Revolt; none of the self-satisfaction of Lawrence Stone or Christopher Hill. Parallels with Schama's Citizens again occur: this narrative, like Citizens, rehabilitates the importance of individuals and events and contingency rather than reducing the Civil War to the product of the interplay of clearly delineated factors. As my tone has probably revealed, I have a great deal of sympathy with this approach. Often `factor-history' with its exclusive preoccupation with the impersonal seems simply too easy; too removed what we know to be the realities of life. If `revisionism' challenged this approach, Adamson's narrative has buried it a good six feet deep.
For my own part, I find exposure to scholarship immoderately pleasing, and I'm sure that `serious' history of this sort will exhilarate the uninitiated, and impress the rest. It will certainly entertain you. It may well adsorb you. And it will make you think afresh about exactly what the Civil War was and why it happened. Your conclusions may be surprising.
An excellent book about events - Rated 
Having read Michael Braddicks' "God's Fury, England's Fire: A New History of the English Civil Wars" I was prepared for Adamson's magnum opus. This is not a book about the civil war; it ends some seven years before Charles's execution. What Adamson does is to take a small period - the summer 1640 to Charles' flight from London in January 1642 - and chronicles the days and weeks showing the machinations leading to the war. Harold Macmillan, when asked what blew governments of course replied - "events!" This is a book about events, a detailed analysis of calamitous, compelling and intricate politics.
The object, the king, meets the force, the parliamentary nobility. For such a weighty book, there is little biographical detail, certainly it is not revealing about the king himself, just his actions. After 11 years of controversial personal rule, taxation, in selecting his advisers, his legal and religious policies, Charles needed money to fight the Scots so has to deal with parliament. It was Charles misfortune to run up against a nobility that "was perhaps the most theologically and legally literate in English history", united by a sense of God given destiny. So the battle of wills between an assertive, cohesive cabal of nobles determined to reduce the power of a principled, but conceited and ineffective monarch begun. It was fought - in the initial phase that this book covers - with deference to procedure; parliament was the cockpit. This was not a revolution but a redefinition of government with resolution nearly achieved on numerous occasions.
The noble cabal was in a precarious position, constantly risking all to seize the initiative. That meant winning hearts and minds beyond the court and parliament, with popularity a vital part of successful politics. To say more is to spoil the plot, this is an intricate story of linkages, divided loyalties and betrayal, flattery and deceit. Royal authority suffered a catastrophic collapse and government had to be reinvented. No one actually wanted a republic. Charles had to negotiate on three home fronts, England certainly but equally Scotland and Ireland while there was a foreign policy dimension that had to be managed. Charles was ultimately a bad politician who was aggressor and appeaser and by "allowing the two strategies to run in tandem virtually guaranteeing the failure of both." Adamson gives an excellent account of the demise of Strafford, even knowing his eventual fate does not detract from the story, how near he was to keeping his head if not his dignity. This aspect alone makes a good book while he deals in fine detail with the Anglo Scottish alliance.
Adamson writes well, his data collection and organisation is formidable although in emphasising points he tends towards persistent repetition. His frequent use of contemporary English quotes and spelling adds texture. There are excellent illustrations, colour plates, drawings and maps. Yet of the 742 pages, 221 (30%) are notes and index and amid the text, footnotes are extensive. I wonder if a web site might be a better place for these. Those interested could make fuller use of them in this format and think of the paper saved.
This is a credible book, essentially a melodrama of hard-core politics with Machiavellian conspiracies pilled high. Adamson is opinionated, and so he should be given the depth of his scholarship. It requires a good knowledge of the Carolinian period. If you want to know what happens next, you will have to wait for him to write more or go elsewhere. Adamson tells a good story, intriguing characters with no shortage of "events."
Very detailed intense account - Rated 
A very impressive work, not least with the amount of scholarship and the depth of knowledge that has gone into it. Adamson gives virtually a day-by-day account, sometimes even hour-by-hour, of the two years leading up to Charles's flight from London and the preparations for civil war.
From a general reader's perspective, there might initially appear to be some shortcomings: there is little explanation of the general political background, such as "what exactly was 'ship-money' and why did people think it was illegal?" Adamson also only gives a few hints of the cultural background, suggesting at one point for example that one can turn to other sources to find information about the role of duelling in aristocratic society, rather than giving an explanation himself. Also, the main characters are presented without much in the way of introduction. However, these are minor defects in a 500-side page-turner. Adamson describes what the main characters did, in great detail, and gives an intelligent guess as to their motives and thinking, often hidden in very interesting footnotes where he discusses the relative weight and reliablility of contradictory documents. Soon, you start to build up a very clear picture of the personalities involved, what drove them, and what kinds of men and women they were, and get quite engrossed in their world.
The traditional Whig history of the period described the leaders of the revolt as moved by the desire for liberty from tyranny. Marxist historians later described them as driven by class interests. Most recently, fashion has swung to conservative historians, who have argued that the initial revolt in 1640-2 was motivated by aristocrats attempting to retain their traditional priviledges. Adamson is in many ways critical of the simplicity of the conservative account, although he is determined to stress how the "revolt" of the nobles centred around a very narrow group of inter-related aristocrats, even if they were able to keep the crucial support of the leaders of the Commons and of the mob in the streets. He is also keen however, to stress that even though the rebels of all classes were not always ideologically consistent, the logic of the events drove them inexorably into a programme for the "Venetianisation" of the English and Scottish kingdoms, reducing the king to a mere figurehead. You do start to feel for the autocratic, duplicitous and vacillating Charles, torn by the desire to save the lives and reputation of those who had been loyal to him, while at the same time trying to hold his different kingdoms together and out of civil war.
I would have thought that perhaps general readers might possibly prefer something with a little more historical and cultural background, but the story reads very well despite that, and the rest of the comments here indicate that readers have got deeply involved in the unfolding story. A more academic historian would doubtless find the book interesting as well, as it gives a well-presented and subtle interpretation of the events.
Intriguers and Revolutionaries - Rated 
First and foremost, do not be put off by the books size, for despite it's girth there is a phenomenally comprehensive bibliography and compendious source notes. You WILL want more! I became utterly absorbed by machinations of the (many) various protagonists.
This book is not a `revisionist' work with the negative connotations that the term implies, but more an investigation into the causes of the internecine conflict of the 1640's with forensic detail. It is told with a fluid and informative, as well as entertaining narrative and the pace rarely slackens, indeed there is much ground to be covered for such a short period of English history.
In short, Adamson's arguments are well supported with convincing documented evidence and although a truly scholarly work, there is enough here for the curious historical thriller reader to become engaged with.
I echo others comments: surly a sequel/s will (I hope) be forthcoming.
High Quality Page Turner - Rated 
"Despite (or because of) its size, The Noble Revolt is a page turner of the highest quality, painstakingly researched and stylishly written. John Adamson has produced a book which stimulates and rewards. You will think differently about the whole 17th Century after reading this magnificent, handsome book. An informed and informative classic."
|