The Metamorphosis of War: The Human Experience of the English Civil Wars, 1642-1651

Author:   Peter Gaunt
Publisher:   Helion & Company
ISBN:  

9781911096603


Pages:   288
Publication Date:   15 September 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Metamorphosis of War: The Human Experience of the English Civil Wars, 1642-1651


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Overview

This book is about the generation who were alive in England and Wales in the mid-17th century and who had both the good fortune and the bad to witness, to live through and (willingly or unwillingly, for good or ill) to participate in the English Civil Wars of 1642-51. It seeks to explore and to retell the stories of those who fought, or were directly caught up, in the civil wars and to recover their very varied personal experiences. This is, therefore, an exploration of the human experiences of civil war rather than a broader military history or a narrative of the conflict; it offers an examination of how warfare affected individuals rather than of the techniques, technologies and technicalities of the fighting - and it provides an assessment of the impact of war on combatants, on civilians and on those who fell somewhere in-between rather than of the political, religious and constitutional causes and consequences of the civil wars. Almost all of the five million men, women and children who were alive in England and Wales during the mid-17th century would have been affected in some way - great or small - by the civil wars. Many adult males fought in the wars, with perhaps one in 10 of them in arms during each of the main campaigning seasons, and perhaps around a quarter of all adult males in arms at some stage during the wars. Many perished, for probably around 200,000 people died in England and Wales as a direct or indirect consequence of the hostilities. Many other civilians were caught up in the fighting, for around 200 English and Welsh towns and villages were garrisoned and attacked, or saw significant military action; more rurally, dozens of castles, manor houses and churches were also fortified and contested. Even those living in areas which largely escaped direct involvement in the fighting were deeply affected by the conflict, for they were governed by new wartime county administrators with wide new powers to conscript, to billet and to requisition goods and property - and they were also hit hard in the pocket and compelled to pay new, regular and much higher taxes to finance the wars. The vast majority of those who fought in, or who were directly affected by, the fighting of the civil wars have left no record of their own - and their experiences can only be hazily reconstructed from impersonal or mediated source material. However, sufficient direct, personal and first-person accounts and other sources survive in the form of diaries, journals, letters, accounts and so forth to enable us to build up a vivid picture of the varied experience of participating in or living through a decade of civil war in England and Wales. These first-person sources are privileged in this new study in order to construct a fresh interpretation of the human experience of the English Civil Wars.

Full Product Details

Author:   Peter Gaunt
Publisher:   Helion & Company
Imprint:   Helion & Company
ISBN:  

9781911096603


ISBN 10:   1911096605
Pages:   288
Publication Date:   15 September 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Peter Gaunt is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Chester and President of The Cromwell Association. He is a specialist in the history of England and Britain in the mid-17th century, including both the military history of the civil wars and the political and constitutional history of the post-war regimes - especially the Cromwellian Protectorate; the latter was the subject of his Doctorate, which was awarded by the University of Exeter. He has written and published extensively in these fields - including more than a dozen books as author and editor - and more than 50 chapters, articles and shorter papers. His books include two different biographies of Oliver Cromwell, an edition of Henry Cromwell's correspondence and full-length military (or wider) studies of the civil war(s) in Wales, in England and Wales, and in Britain and Ireland as a whole. With the late Professor Barry Coward, he was also co-editor of English Historical Documents, 1603-60.

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