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Belated Crusaders: Religious Fears in Anglo-French Diplomacy 1654–1655

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Ruth Kleinman
Affiliation:
associate professor of history inthe City University of New York, Brooklyn College

Extract

Historians have commonly taken the secularization of politics and diplomacy as one of the great themes of the seventeenth century, and rightly so. But secular attitudes in matters of state did not move in an unbroken, irresistible progression; until well into the century they coexisted with more traditional modes of thought and developed against resistance from many people who still believed it immoral to divorce religion from politics. Moreover it was by no means always clear which trend was the stronger. Thus long after the Peace of Westphalia, for example, the possibility of international religious war continued to seem real, even to the point where fears of it entered into considerations of diplomacy. One interesting case of this kind arose in the course of Anglo-French negotiations during the mid-1650s, when apprehension of a Catholic crusade on the one side and rumors of a Protestant one on the other added a special dimension to an already complicated situation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1975

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References

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58. CPA, 60, folios 359–361.

59. Abbott, 3:45–125; Paul, pp. 281–284.

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76. His agent Barrière did not leave London until the spring of 1656; CPA, 65, folios 268–268 verso, Bordeaux to Brienne, 15 May 1656.

77. Thurloe, 2:555–556, 600–601, 614–615, 624–625, 646–647, 665, 678, 680–681, 692, 697–698, 702, 711, 718–719, 739; 3:92.

78. Abbott, 3:876–877; CPA, 66, folios 122–135, Cromwell's ratification of the treaty, 7 November 1655; folios 136–137, Cromwell's ratification of the secret articles, 7 November 1655.

79. CPA, 64, folio 154 verso, unsigned memorandum probably drafted by Servien, 1 August 1654.

80. Abbott, 3:260–261.

81. Abbott, 4:139, Cromwell's instructions to Colonel William Lockhart, his ambassador to France, April 1656.

82. As cited in Batten, p. 172; Dury was addressing an appeal to Charles II for support.

83. Ibid.; Brauer, pp. 197–201.

84. Haag and Haag, 2:496–497.

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