A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
When “Comoners Were Made Slaves by the Magistrates”
This article tells the story of a contested provincial election for sheriff which took place in Norwich during 1627. In light of recent scholarly critiques of studies that frame the early-modern period in terms of binary opposites, this article demonstrates that 1620s political culture is hard to define in such stark terms. Through a close reading of the events, characters, and outcomes of the election, this article also shows the importance of embedding local peculiarities into wider historiographical narratives of change, or continuity, and reveals the essential role of the urban middling sorts in shaping the political narratives of the Stuart period.
When “Comoners Were Made Slaves by the Magistrates”
This article tells the story of a contested provincial election for sheriff which took place in Norwich during 1627. In light of recent scholarly critiques of studies that frame the early-modern period in terms of binary opposites, this article demonstrates that 1620s political culture is hard to define in such stark terms. Through a close reading of the events, characters, and outcomes of the election, this article also shows the importance of embedding local peculiarities into wider historiographical narratives of change, or continuity, and reveals the essential role of the urban middling sorts in shaping the political narratives of the Stuart period.
When “Comoners Were Made Slaves by the Magistrates”
Williamson, Fiona (author)
2017
Article (Journal)
English
IuD Bahn | 2007
|British Library Online Contents | 1993
Magistrates' Court in Bad Liebenwerda
British Library Online Contents | 2001