5020007

9781400044511

Tyrannicide Brief The Story of the Man Who Sent Charles I to the Scaffold

Tyrannicide Brief The Story of the Man Who Sent Charles I to the Scaffold
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  • Comments: Former Library book. Hardcover This item shows wear from consistent use but remains in good readable condition. It may have marks on or in it, and may show other signs of previous use or shelf wear. May have minor creases or signs of wear on dust jacket. Packed with care, shipped promptly.

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  • ISBN-13: 9781400044511
  • ISBN: 1400044510
  • Publication Date: 2006
  • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group

AUTHOR

Robertson, Geoffrey

SUMMARY

The first recorded existence of John Cooke is in the register of All Saints church in the village of Husbands Bosworth, just south of Leicester. Here he was baptised on 18 September 1608, an indication that his birth had taken place a few days before. He came from poor but healthy farming stock: his father, Isaac Cooke, was twenty-five, and would live until the age of seventy-four. Isaac was one of twelve children of Abraham Cooke, who would die in 1620 at a similar age. If John could come through his early years, in this period when a third of all infants died before reaching five, he could be expected to live through all the seven ages of man predicted by Shakespeare, at this time writing his final plays for the London theatre. His family were God-fearing farmers, with allotments that dotted the countryside for twenty miles to the town of Burbage. Husbands Bosworth was named for all its husbandmen tenant farmers whose smallholdings sustained their families but little else and that would have been his parents' expectation for baby John. What mattered most to Isaac and Elizabeth was that he would live an abstemious and pious life, his ability to do so being regarded as an outward sign that he was one of the 'elect' predestined for paradise when the Son of God returned to claim the earth. This mattered so much to these Puritan parents that for the baptism of their first-born they had travelled from their own farm, just outside Burbage, where the rector was a well-connected Anglican who obeyed the bishop, to Elizabeth's austere family church. Its minister was willing to dispense with 'impure' rituals, like motioning the sign of the cross over the head of the baptised infant. That such a tiny gesture could become a major bone of contention between the bishops of the Church of England, who were sticklers for rituals and symbols, and those Puritan worshippers who wished to 'purify' the Church of all such distractions, was typical of the internecine squabbling that had rent the Anglican religion. Puritans like the Cookes were thick on the ground in the Midlands and the eastern counties and many local ministers were sympathetic to their preference for deritualised worship, which was anathema to King James and his bishops. James I had been invited from Scotland (where he ruled as James VI) to take the English throne on Elizabeth I's death in 1603. The optimism among Puritans in England that a man from the austere Calvinist Kirk would look sympathetically on their similar form of worship had soon been dashed: James was obsessed with his God-given right to rule as an absolute prince, through a hierarchy supported by archbishops and bishops, alongside his councillors and favourite courtiers. From the outset of his reign he urged the Anglican authorities to discipline ministers who refused to follow approved rituals or who spoke on politics from the pulpit. James I was very far from being 'the wisest fool in Christendom': he was highly educated and very canny, and he knew exactly where the Puritans' hostility to hierarchy in their church would lead: 'no Bishop, no King'. James warned his son to 'hate no man more than a proud Puritan'. He did not persecute them, but encouraged the Church to discriminate against them and to sack their ministers. The King's edicts, on matters of Sunday observance in particular, were often at variance with the strict moral code of these godly communities, and the profligacy and debauchery of his court further outraged them. As John Cooke grew up, there was much prurient gossip amongst the faithful about a monarch who claimed divine authority yet who maintained a luxurious and licentious court, financed by selling titles and monopolies, and who boasted that his favourite pastimes were 'hunRobertson, Geoffrey is the author of 'Tyrannicide Brief The Story of the Man Who Sent Charles I to the Scaffold', published 2006 under ISBN 9781400044511 and ISBN 1400044510.

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