Programme/Approved Electives for 2022/23
None
Available as a Free Standing Elective
Yes
The English Revolution - war, the execution of King Charles I, the abolition of the monarchy and house of lords, and the establishment of the first (and currently last) republic in England - constitutes the most revolutionary period in English history. To contemporaries they were the world turned upside down. They retain their hold today over the popular and scholarly imaginations and can still bitterly divide amateur and professional historians. Many issues of the period - such as the nature of the relationship between England, Scotland, and Ireland, the character of the political process, or what to do about the monarchy or house of lords - find echoes today. This module will seek to explore and analyse the character and events of the English revolution from the the end of the first civil war and the surrender of the king to the Scots, through the regicide and establishment of the first English republic, to the establishment of the Protectorate in 1653, which some saw as the destruction of the changes they had fought for in the previous decade. Topics to be covered will include the development of newspapers in the period, the execution of the king, radical political ideas and the Levellers, political crisis and the failure to find a settlement, and the growth of radical religious ideas.This module may be linked to the module HIS-30086, The English Civil War, c.1640-46. It may also be linked to the dissertation in History: there is a wealth of source material for a dissertation on the political, social, cultural, military or local history of mid seventeenth-century England available at Keele, including access to every book published in Britain in the period through Early English Books Online.Students interested in some introductory reading should start with one of the many histories of England in the 1640s and 1650s. Among the best is Austin Woolrych, Britain in Revolution 1625-1660 (2004).
Aims
To analyse the political, social, religious, cultural and military history of England from the end of the first civil war, 1646, through the execution of the king and establishment of the English republic, to the collapse of the Rump Parliament and the rule of a Lord Protector, 1653; to enable students to analyse some of the sources used and debates produced by historians in exploring the period.
Talis Aspire Reading ListAny reading lists will be provided by the start of the course.http://lists.lib.keele.ac.uk/modules/his-30087/lists
Intended Learning Outcomes
explain the history of England between c.1646 and c.1653, particularly political, religious, social and cultural change: 1,2evaluate and critically assess a range of primary sources and use them appropriately in the development of historical analysis: 1,2compare contemporary responses to the political crises of the period: 1,2analyse debates about the nature of the English revolution in the period: 1,2
150 hours: 12 x 2-hours of seminars; 12 x 1 hour of workshops; 54 hours of seminar and workshop preparation; 35 hours researching and writing the source assessment; 25 hours researching and writing the material history blog.
Description of Module Assessment
1: Case Study weighted 50%Source assessmentAssessment (2000 words) of a type of source (such as newspapers, letters, or diaries) from the period, discussing their uses and limitations for historians.
2: Coursework weighted 50%Material History Blog PostAlong the lines of History in 100 Objects, students will choose one object for an online exhibition on the theme of a material history of the English Revolution ¿ suitable objects include seventeenth-century tracts, manuscripts, relics, paintings, and clothing. Students will source an image of the object and then write a description of the object and its significance for understandings of the English Revolution aimed at an interested general audience. As well as being submitted to Turnitin in the usual way, images and descriptions will be posted to a special online blog. Word limit: 1,000 words.