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Anglo-Scottish Relations, 1603–40

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

Clarendon, in his History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England, states that the disturbances in Scotland which preceded- the Bishops' Wars came as a shock to the English councillors of King Charles I. It seems probable that they came as a shock to King Charles himself. The unexampled authority that his father James VI had succeeded in establishing for the Crown in Scotland—an authority Which he continued to exercise at long range when he became king of England—was something which Charles I had learnt to take for granted.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1950

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References

page 31 note 1 Parliamentary History of England (London, 1806), i. 1110.

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page 33 note 5 Ibid., vii. 81.

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page 37 note 1 Spottiswoode, iii. 156.

page 37 note 2 Balfour, ii. 17.

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page 37 note 4 Domestic Annals of Scotland, ed. Chambers (Edinburgh, 1858), i. 423.

page 37 note 5 Register, xii. 775.

page 38 note 1 Ibid., Second Series, v. 497.

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page 39 note 2 Memoirs of Lochiel, p. 55.

page 39 note 3 Register Second Series, v. 36–7.

page 39 note 4 Ibid., vi. 212, 283

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page 43 note 4 Ibid., xiii. 777.

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page 44 note 3 Ibid., xiv. 407.

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page 44 note 6 Ibid., p. 70.

page 44 note 7 Abbotsford Miscellany (Edinburgh, 1837), p. 229.

page 45 note 1 Acts of Parliament of Scotland, iv. 436.

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