1. Laurence Hyde and the Politics of Religion in Later Stuart England*.
- Author
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Tapsell, Grant
- Subjects
- *
NOBILITY (Social class) , *SEVENTEENTH century , *RELIGION , *RELIGIOUS life ,HISTORY of church & politics ,ENGLISH church history ,ENGLISH civilization ,BRITISH politics & government, 1660-1714 - Abstract
Religion has been increasingly reintegrated into the study of later seventeenth-century English politics. Nevertheless, historians of the later Stuart period have not displayed the same gusto for case studies of individuals’ careers as their colleagues working on the pre-civil war era. This article looks at the important role of religion within the career of Laurence Hyde, earl of Rochester (1642-1711), a very significant but under-studied politician whose long career in public life stretched from the Restoration to the latter part of Anne’s reign. It is argued that a vital dimension of Hyde’s religious beliefs can be supplied by a detailed consideration of his family life. His father’s example, his sister’s conversion, a series of early deaths, and his relationships with his brother-in-law – James II – and nieces – Mary II and Anne – all combined to define Hyde’s public status. The interplay of these factors would lead to acute crisis in the winter of 1686/7, when his position as the protestant chief minister of a catholic king became untenable, and chronic discontent thereafter until his death in 1711. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
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