Book contents
- On Laudianism
- Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History
- On Laudianism
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Laudianism: Where It Came From
- Part II Laudianism: What It Was
- Part III Laudianism: What It Wasn’t
- Part IV Laudianism and Predestination
- Part V Laudianism as Coalition: The Constituent Parts
- Chapter 32 Dis-aggregating, or the Pleasures and Benefits of Splitting
- Chapter 33 Of Converts, Collaborators and Apostates
- Chapter 34 Of Converts, Collaborators and Apostates
- Chapter 35 Of Apparatchiks, Zealots and Coming Men
- Chapter 36 The Laudian Avant Garde
- Chapter 37 The Laudian Avant Garde
- Chapter 38 Tacking and Trimming
- Chapter 39 Conclusion to Part V
- Conclusion
- Index
Chapter 38 - Tacking and Trimming
Negotiating the End of the ‘Laudian Moment’
from Part V - Laudianism as Coalition: The Constituent Parts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2023
- On Laudianism
- Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History
- On Laudianism
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Laudianism: Where It Came From
- Part II Laudianism: What It Was
- Part III Laudianism: What It Wasn’t
- Part IV Laudianism and Predestination
- Part V Laudianism as Coalition: The Constituent Parts
- Chapter 32 Dis-aggregating, or the Pleasures and Benefits of Splitting
- Chapter 33 Of Converts, Collaborators and Apostates
- Chapter 34 Of Converts, Collaborators and Apostates
- Chapter 35 Of Apparatchiks, Zealots and Coming Men
- Chapter 36 The Laudian Avant Garde
- Chapter 37 The Laudian Avant Garde
- Chapter 38 Tacking and Trimming
- Chapter 39 Conclusion to Part V
- Conclusion
- Index
Summary
This chapter analyses the ways in which a variety of men negotiated the collapse of the Personal Rule and the Laudian project. On the one hand, we have the Calvinist conformist Robert Sanderson, who, by shifting the emphasis of what remained the same set of opinions was able to distance himself, and the church of England, from the excesses of Laudianism, while still protecting that church from what he presented as the reckless assaults and absurdities of the puritans, and rallying support for the king. On the other hand, we have Peter Heylyn, by this point the archetypal Laudian, engaging ideologue, tacking and trimming by emphasising his opposition to popery, even as he used the same arguments that he was deploying against the papists to continue his remorseless assault on the puritans. Here, in effect, we can watch the Laudian coalition coming apart at the seams under the pressure of the Scots war and the political crisis that ensured in England.
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- On LaudianismPiety, Polemic and Politics During the Personal Rule of Charles I, pp. 541 - 562Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023