Fig. 1 - Charles Landseer - The Eve of the Battle of Edge Hill, 1642
Defining the English Civil War
King Charles I (r. 1625-1649) believed that a king was divinely appointed by God and should rule his kingdom absolutely–which is a type of government defined as absolutism. However, since the Magna Carta, the English believed the people had rights to their person and property above the rule of any king–this is what we call constitutionalism. This difference in opinion resulted in tensions between the King and Parliament, and Charles refused to call any more parliaments after 1629. He was determined to rule on his own and did until 1637.
Charles wanted to bring religious uniformity to his three kingdoms of England, Scotland, and Ireland. However, he chose the Church of England as his model. As a result, the Scots revolted when he tried to force a new prayer book on Scotland in 1637. Many English also opposed Charles' religious reform because they thought it resembled Catholicism, which they hated and feared.
The English Civil War Begins
When Charles finally turned to Parliament in 1640 for military funds, they responded that the threat to their liberties was more pressing than the Scottish revolt. In retaliation, he tried to have five leading members of Parliament arrested but failed. Finally, in 1642, Charles left London to raise an army to fight Parliament, and Parliament created their own New Model Army. Civil war erupted.
Fig. 2 - Triple portrait of Charles I
Absolutism vs. Constitutionalism
Absolutism is a government structure where the monarch argues that their right to rule comes from God because he is God's appointee on earth. Therefore, the monarch is above any other law because of this divine connection.
On the other hand, constitutionalism limits the government through a written set of laws or constitutions. Enacted in 1215 and reconfirmed numerous times until the Tudor era ended, the Magna Carta was considered a constitution. After the English Civil War, Parliament used the Magna Carta to establish a constitutionalist government.
Causes of the English Civil War
There were many potential causes for the outbreak of civil war, and historians have debated these causes since the war ended. Three prominent schools of history surrounding this topic include the Marxists, the Revisionists, and the Post-Revisionists.
A Marxist Interpretation of the English Civil War
The Marxists, chief among them Christopher Hill, believed that the English Civil War was a class struggle between the elite nobility and a rising lower class. He championed Oliver Cromwell as a revolutionary hero against a despotic King Charles I. Other Marxists believed that strained economic circumstances due to England's role in the Thirty Years War.
A Revisionist Interpretation of the English Civil War
The revisionists are less united than the Marxists, but they all agree that the English Civil War was not part of a steady march towards progress. For example, Conrad Russell, a prominent revisionist, believed that the Civil War's causes were not in England alone but also in Scotland and Ireland. According to Russell, Charles tried to govern his three kingdoms as a single body, but they differed in politics and religion, so everything fell into chaos.
A Post-Revisionist Interpretation of the English Civil War
Post-Revisionism is another school without much agreement but primarily challenges the reliance of "great men" to tell the story of the Civil War's causes. Post-Revisionists like Ann Hughes incorporate new ways of looking at the conflict, for example, through gender studies. She argued that the Civil War had no long-term causes but instead resulted from "conflicting views of religion, politics, and culture."1 She states that the common people had just as much impact on events as the elites.
Significant Battles of the English Civil War
Royalist Win | Parliament Win |
Battle of Braddock Down, January 19, 1643. Secured the northern county of Cornwall for King Charles. | Battle of Newbury, September 20, 1643. Charles withdrew, leaving the almost conquered New Model Army with the win. The beginning of Charles' decline. |
Battle of Stratton, May 16, 1643. Major Royalist victory that resulted in 1700 captured Parliamentarians. | Battle of Marsten Moor, July 2, 1644. Oliver Cromwell secures victory and becomes a war hero. |
Storming of Bristol, July 26, 1643. Royalists capture the strategically important town of Bristol. | Battle of Naseby, June 14, 1645. Royalist forces were destroyed, and Parliament's war victory was assured. |
Fig. 3 - The Battle of Naseby, 14 June 1645
Charles surrendered to the Scottish army in 1646 and tried to convince them to fight against the Parliamentarians. However, the Scottish ransomed the king to Parliament in January 1647. Meanwhile, petitions from the New Model Army to Parliament for back pay resulted in the petitioners' arrest and orders to disband. In response, the army organized against Parliament and seized the king in June 1647. Army generals such as Oliver Cromwell took over control of Parliament.
Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658)
Oliver Cromwell was a member of Parliament and a general in the New Model Army. He was staunchly Puritan (a religious sect that did not conform to the Church of England) and believed God directed his actions in war and statecraft. His charisma and military effectiveness made him a powerful political player on behalf of the New Model Army. His ability to inspire and direct the populace led to his nomination as Lord Protector of the new Commonwealth of England, which he accepted in 1653.
Charles refused all attempts to negotiate a settlement between the Royalists and Parliamentarians. Finally, in 1649, the Army-controlled Parliament under Cromwell put Charles I on trial for high treason. The king was executed on January 30, 1649.
Fig. 4 - The Execution of Charles I, unknown artist, 1649
Effects of the Civil War
- Parliament abolished the English monarchy and established the Commonwealth of England in its place under Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell.
- Charles' family, including his heir, the future King Charles II, fled to exile in France.
- Not all agreed with the new government. The Scottish refused to recognize the Commonwealth and declared Charles II king, leading to another civil war with a Parliament victory in 1652.
Fig. 5 - Oliver Cromwell c. 1653
Restoration and Glorious Revolution
The Commonwealth fell apart after Cromwell died in 1658. Parliament then invited Charles II to return to England as king in 1660, marking the Restoration period. However, when Charles II died in 1685, his Catholic brother, James II, became king. Catholic fear combined with James' desire to rule in a more absolutist fashion brought memories of the Civil War back to the surface. This unrest led to the Glorious Revolution in 1688, which replaced James II with his daughter and son-in-law, Mary II and William III, under a constitutional monarchy.
The English Civil War - Key Takeaways
- The English Civil War was a struggle between King Charles I's faction, the Royalists, and Parliament for government control.
- The war's causes are hotly debated, but modern historians agree that blame lay on both sides and that many factors contributed to the outbreak of war.
- The effects of the war included the execution of King Charles I, the establishment of a Commonwealth of England under Oliver Cromwell, and the exile of the royal family.
References
1. Ann Hughes, Causes of the English Civil War, 1991
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