This book recasts one of the most well-studied and popularly-beloved eras in history: the tumultuous span from the 1485 accession of Henry VII to the 1603 death of Elizabeth I. Though many have gravitated toward this period for its high drama and national importance, the book offers a new narrative by focusing on another facet of the British past that has exercised an equally powerful grip on audiences: imperialism. It argues that the sixteenth century was pivotal to the making of both Britain and the British Empire. Unearthing over a century of theorizing about and probing into the world beyond England’s borders, Tudor Empire shows that foreign enterprise at once mirrored, responded to, and provoked domestic politics and culture, while decisively shaping the Atlantic World. Demonstrating that territorial expansion abroad and national consolidation and identity formation at home were concurrent, intertwined, and mutually reinforcing, the author examines some of the earliest ventures undertaken by the crown and its subjects in France, Scotland, Ireland, and the Americas. Tudor Empire is a thought-provoking, essential read for those interested in the Tudors and the British Empire that they helped create.
Author(s): Jessica S. Hower
Series: Britain and the World
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 411
City: Cham
Acknowledgments
Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction: “This Realme of Englond is an Impire”
Chapter 2: “The direction which they look, and the distance they sailed”: The Birth of an Imperial Dynasty, 1485–1509
Chapter 3: “Ungracious Dogholes”: Experiments in Empire, Ca. 1513–1527
Chapter 4: “More Fully Playnly and Clerely Set Fourth to All the World”: England, Scotland, and “Thempire of Greate Briteigne” in the 1530s and 1540s
Chapter 5: “Recouer thyne aunciente bewtie”: Mid-Tudor Empire over Mid-Tudor Crisis, 1550–1570
Chapter 6: “The very path trodden by our ancestors”: The Elizabethan Moment, 1570–1588
Chapter 7: “Travelers or tinkers, conquerers or crounes”: Tudor Empire in the Last Decade, 1588–1603
Chapter 8: Conclusion: “Such an honourable seruice”
Index