The Chief Governors
The Rise and Fall of Reform Government in Tudor Ireland 15361588 (Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History)
New Ed edition
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Word Count
85,750 words, Guess
Page Count
343 pages
Physical Format
Paperback
Identifiers
- Internet Archivechiefgovernorsri00brad
- ISBN-100521520045
- ISBN-139780521520041
- Goodreads1513943
- Better World Books9780521520041
and 1 more
- Open LibraryOL7744037M
Classifications
- LCCDA935 .B69 1994
- DDC941.505
Description
This book offers an extended reinterpretation of English policy in Ireland over the sixteenth century. It seeks to show that the major conflicts between Tudor governors and native lords which characterised the period were not the result of a deliberate Tudor strategy of confrontation as conventional interpretations have assumed, but argues that they arose from a failed experiment in legal reform and cultural assimilation which had been applied with remarkable success elsewhere in the Tudor dominions. The book seeks to explain the course of this exceptional failure, and it identifies a distinct administrative style which evolved in Irish government during the middle of the century under a complex set of pressures acting on the would-be reformers both in Ireland and at the Tudor court. It argues that it was this distinctive, highly centralised and intensely activist mode of government that inadvertently undermined the aims of reform policy and provoked the alienation and hostility that was precisely the opposite result to that which was originally intended.
First Sentence
'Poor Leonard Grey', as he began to sign himself soon after his appointment as lord deputy in February 1536, has been as harshly treated by historians as he was in his own times.
Excerpt
'Poor Leonard Grey', as he began to sign himself soon after his appointment as lord deputy in February 1536, has been as harshly treated by historians as he was in his own times.
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Other Editions
- The Chief Governors: The Rise and Fall of Reform Government in Tudor Ireland 15361588 (Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History)
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