The Expansion of Elizabethan EnglandSpringer, 2003 M04 4 - 450 páginas Elizabethan society is arguably the most successful in English history. The adventurers and merchants (as well as the poets and playwrights) of that age are legendary. The subject of this classic study by A.L. Rowse is that society's 'expansion'. Elizabethan society expanded both physically (first into Cornwall, then Ireland, then across the oceans to first contact with Russian, the Canadian North and then the opening up of trade with India and the Far East) and in terms of ideas and influence on international affairs. Rowse argues that in the Elizabethan age we see the beginning of England's huge impact upon the world. |
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Página 4
... English throne, James had suppressed the Clan Gregor and driven the Macleods out of their island of Lewis, planting it with a company of Adventurers, adopting—as a Scottish Nationalist historian charmingly says—“ the method of the English ...
... English throne, James had suppressed the Clan Gregor and driven the Macleods out of their island of Lewis, planting it with a company of Adventurers, adopting—as a Scottish Nationalist historian charmingly says—“ the method of the English ...
Página 7
... English reprisals were apt to be organised by the authorities themselves and to inflict more damage. Sometimes there was good co-operation between the authorities on both sides, the English and Scottish Wardens who governed these ...
... English reprisals were apt to be organised by the authorities themselves and to inflict more damage. Sometimes there was good co-operation between the authorities on both sides, the English and Scottish Wardens who governed these ...
Página 17
... English forces through Teviotdale on a campaign of reprisals, burning castles, houses, villages of the Scottish supporters of the English rebels. The Scots had “threshed their corn, fled with their cattle, and unthatched their houses ...
... English forces through Teviotdale on a campaign of reprisals, burning castles, houses, villages of the Scottish supporters of the English rebels. The Scots had “threshed their corn, fled with their cattle, and unthatched their houses ...
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... English at their pleasure *.* These laws dealt with murder, maiming, theft, feud, the burning of houses and crops ; hunting, sowing corn, pasturing cattle and cutting down trees in the opposite realm ; receiving stolen goods and ...
... English at their pleasure *.* These laws dealt with murder, maiming, theft, feud, the burning of houses and crops ; hunting, sowing corn, pasturing cattle and cutting down trees in the opposite realm ; receiving stolen goods and ...
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... English Reprints), 47: “... his custom of swearing and obscenity in speaking made him seem a worse Christian than he ... English Poesie, Arber's English Reprints, 274-6). * Cary, Memoirs, 99-100. * Creighton, op. cit. 1 16-17, 144 ...
... English Reprints), 47: “... his custom of swearing and obscenity in speaking made him seem a worse Christian than he ... English Poesie, Arber's English Reprints, 274-6). * Cary, Memoirs, 99-100. * Creighton, op. cit. 1 16-17, 144 ...
Contenido
1 | |
WALES | 45 |
A CELTIC SOCIETY IN DECLINE | 90 |
COLONISATION AND CONQUEST | 126 |
V OCEANIC VOYAGES | 158 |
VI AMERICAN COLONISATION | 206 |
VII THE SEASTRUGGLE WITH SPAIN | 238 |
VIII THE ARMADA AND AFTER | 266 |
MILITARY ORGANISATION | 327 |
X INTERVENTION IN THE NETHERLANDS | 374 |
XI THE IRISH WAR | 415 |
INDEX | 439 |
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