Roundhead Reputations: The English Civil Wars And the Passions of Posterity: The English Civil War and the Passions of Posterity

Roundhead Reputations: The English Civil Wars And the Passions of Posterity: The English Civil War and the Passions of Posterity

by Blair Worden (Author)

Synopsis

The scars of England's Civil Wars have never healed. In Roundhead Reputations Blair Worden shows how, over 350 years, the memory of the conflict has been a battlefield of its own. In every age, writers and readers have seen their own reflections in the conflict and have used images of Puritan rule to sanction programmes for the present. The Cavalier allegiance has been inherited by successive generations of Tories and Anglicans, the Roundhead one by their opponents. Contenting against each other, the two traditions have also divided within themselves. Roundhead Reputations tells the Parliamentarian side of the story. It explains how radical Whigs in the late 17th and the 18th century, combative Liberals and Nonconformists in the 19th, and Marxists in the 20th struggled against more establishment-minded Roundhead sympathizers for interpretative supremacy. Blair Worden begins by discussing a spectacularly successful literary fabrication: the Memoirs of the regicide Edmund Ludlow, always a prominent source for the Civil wars, which were concocted for a Whig purpose and deceived posterity for three centuries. The middle section turns on representations of Algernon Sidney, a colourfully splenetic republican transformed by posthumous admirers into a plaster-saint. Finally he considers the fluctuating reputation of Oliver Cromwell, whom the Victorians, inspired by Thomas Carlyle's great edition of his letters and speeches, rescued from obloquy and made a cult figure -until socialists came to prefer the Levellers and Diggers, the Civil War heroes of modern times. For anyone interested in the Civil Wars, or in how history gets to be written, Roundhead Reputations should be enjoyable. Blair Worden is one of the leading scholars of the period, and this is a major work with large implications for an understanding both of England's sense of its own identity and of the relationship between past and present.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 400
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Allen Lane
Published: 01 Nov 2001

ISBN 10: 071399603X
ISBN 13: 9780713996036

Author Bio
Blair Worden is Professor of History at the University of Sussex and regularly reviews for the Sunday Telegraph, The Times Literary Supplement and elsewhere.