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The Cecils: Privilege and Power Behind the…
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The Cecils: Privilege and Power Behind the Throne (édition 2009)

par David Loades (Auteur)

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For over 50 years one family dominated England's high offices of state. William and Robert Cecil, father and son, held unparalleled power as statesmen, diplomats, counsellors and spymasters throughout Elizabeth's reign and long beyond. From Privy Councillor to Chief Secretary of State and Lord High Treasurer, both exerted far-reaching influence to secure the Queen's realm and legacy. They enjoyed her reliance and trust, and Robert the gratitude of her successor James I, yet each inhabited a perilous world where favour brought enemies and a wrong step could lead to disaster. In "The Cecils", David Loades reveals the personal and political lives of these remarkable men. He shows how father and son negotiated volatile court life, battling flamboyant favourites like Robert Dudley and the ill-fated Earl of Essex and playing for time to stabilise a country still torn by religious divide. He discovers the contradictory characters of these advocates of caution who nevertheless took great personal risks, such as William's role in the execution of Mary Queen of Scots and Robert's secret negotiations with James VI of Scotland before Elizabeth's death.Yet these principled public servants - who put the interests of the State before their own - still amassed large personal wealth, and relished its display at their great houses of Burghley, Theobalds and Hatfield. From the early days of turmoil, when William escaped the fate of Thomas Seymour and honed his strategies for survival, to the shadowy intrigues of the Jacobean court, this is a fascinating portrait of men who shaped an extraordinary age.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:Katemartin
Titre:The Cecils: Privilege and Power Behind the Throne
Auteurs:David Loades (Auteur)
Info:Bloomsbury Academic (2009), Edition: New edition, 312 pages
Collections:Votre bibliothèque, En cours de lecture
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Mots-clés:History, English, 16th Century, 2021

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The Cecils: Privilege and Power Behind the Throne par David Loades

#1131 17 July 2008 (1) A lire (3) Angleterre (2) Biographie (2) Calais 1558 (1) Edward de Vere 1550-1604 17th earl of Oxford (1) Edward VI Tudor 1537/1547-53 king of England & Ireland (1) England C16th-17th - court & politics (1) Henri III de Valois-Angoulême 1551/1574-89 roi de France [king of Poland & grand duke of Lithuania 1573-5] (1) Henri IV de Bourbon 1553/1589-1610 roi de France [Henri III roi de Navarre 1572-1610] (1) Histoire (11) Histoire des Tudor (3) history (1500-1600) (1) James I Stuart 1566/1603-25 king of England & Ireland [James VI Stewart king of Scots 1567-1625] (1) John Dudley KG 1504-53 1st duke of Northumberland [Lord Admiral 1537-47; Lord President of the Council & de facto Regent 1550-53] (1) LCSH in comments (1) Mary I Tudor 1516/1553-58 queen regnant of England & Ireland [queen consort of Spain & both Sicilies & a/duke of Austria & duke of Milan Burgundy Brabant 1556-58; queen consort of Naples & of Jerusalem 1554-58] (1) non-fiction (4) Politique (2) Pre 16th Century England (1) Robert Cecil KG 1563-1612 1st earl of Salisbury [Sec of State 1596-1612; Lord Privy Seal 1598-1612; Lord High Treasurer 1608-12] (1) Robert Devereux KG 1565-1601 2nd earl of Essex (1) Robert Dudley KG 1532/3-88 1st earl of Leicester (1) Tudor (2) Tudors/Stuarts (1) William Cecil KG 1520-98 1st baron Burghley [Sec of State 1550-53 & 1558-72; Lord Privy Seal 1571-2 & 1590-98; Lord High Treasurer 1572-98] (1) XVIe siècle (3) y2008 (1) Élisabeth Ire d'Angleterre (2) Élisabéthain (2)
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http://nhw.livejournal.com/1136503.html

Further to my secondary research on the Elizabethan period, here is a biography of William and Robert Cecil, respectively Lord Burghley and Earl of Salisbury, who were the chief ministers of Elizabeth I and James I, and established stability while overseeing England's first ever peaceful transition between reigning dynasties.

The Cecils, like the Tudors, were minor Welsh-speaking gentry who moved to England and made good. Loades asserts that they shared with the Tudors a sympathy for the urban middle classes rather than the House of Lords. It's an interesting assertion, but unfortunarely he doesn't source it and the evidence he provides isn't terribly substantial. But it is worth bearing in mind as we read about the Queen and her leading counsellor that they were indeed dynastic parvenus, whose ancestors were not aristocrats.

We get a very good picture of Cecil as super-efficient administrator and courtier, playing the game and playing it well. Loades is vigorously revisionist in places: he detects no long-standing rivalry between Cecil and Dudley once it became clear that the Queen was not going to marry the latter, and goes out of his way to rehabilitate the reputation of Thomas, William's first son and Robert's elder brother. (Which inclines me to take his assertion about the Tudors' social instincts more seriously.)

I was already pretty familiar with the general outline of the history from other recent reading, but Loades added some interesting extra details - notably on the astonishing career of Mary, Queen of Scots, whose catastrophic failure as a ruler resulted in her becoming one of William Cecil's more burdensome dossiers. Frankly if her story were written as a novel it would be difficult to believe. Another topic that was new to me was the weird political and economic consequences of the state's support of piracy against Spain.

Ireland, once again, features only as an occasional source of backgroud trouble, and then the scene of the disastrous end of Essex's career, which I now realise was probably the biggest impact Ireland had on English politics between 1399 (the fall of Richard II) and 1641 (the Phelim O'Neill rising and massacres). No particular quotes from or about William Cecil's Irish friend Nicholas White, but I was able to fill in one gap: White is said to have been a tutor in Cecil's household in the 1550s. This must presumably have been to the older son, Thomas, who was born in 1542 (the next child, Anne, was not born until 1556 - she grew up to disastrously marry the Earl of Oxford, who didn't write the works of Shakespeare); Thomas was sent to Camnridge in 1558 and then to the Continent in 1561. Robert was not born until 1562, by which time White was launched into his Irish political career.

Anyway, good solid stuff. ( )
  nwhyte | Dec 21, 2008 |
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For over 50 years one family dominated England's high offices of state. William and Robert Cecil, father and son, held unparalleled power as statesmen, diplomats, counsellors and spymasters throughout Elizabeth's reign and long beyond. From Privy Councillor to Chief Secretary of State and Lord High Treasurer, both exerted far-reaching influence to secure the Queen's realm and legacy. They enjoyed her reliance and trust, and Robert the gratitude of her successor James I, yet each inhabited a perilous world where favour brought enemies and a wrong step could lead to disaster. In "The Cecils", David Loades reveals the personal and political lives of these remarkable men. He shows how father and son negotiated volatile court life, battling flamboyant favourites like Robert Dudley and the ill-fated Earl of Essex and playing for time to stabilise a country still torn by religious divide. He discovers the contradictory characters of these advocates of caution who nevertheless took great personal risks, such as William's role in the execution of Mary Queen of Scots and Robert's secret negotiations with James VI of Scotland before Elizabeth's death.Yet these principled public servants - who put the interests of the State before their own - still amassed large personal wealth, and relished its display at their great houses of Burghley, Theobalds and Hatfield. From the early days of turmoil, when William escaped the fate of Thomas Seymour and honed his strategies for survival, to the shadowy intrigues of the Jacobean court, this is a fascinating portrait of men who shaped an extraordinary age.

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