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The monarchy (together with the Anglican Church and the House of Lords) was restored in 1660, two years after Cromwell’s death, when Charles II was invited to sit on the throne of a country tired of the harsh morality of Puritan rule. The Plague, which killed almost 70,000 of London’s inhabitants, and the Great Fire (1666), which destroyed most of the city during his reign, were considered signs of God’s wrath by the Puritans.
Although Charles had restored some power to the monarchy by the time James II came to the throne, Parliament’s support was necessary to govern the country. Parliament was dominated by two groups: the Whigs, who had tried to exclude Charles’ Catholic brother from the throne, and the Tories, the conservative aristocracy that had favoured the royal prerogative. However, his filling of civil and military posts with Catholics while the Protestants were being murdered in France so angered Parliament that the Tories and Whigs agreed to invite the Protestant William of Orange and Mary (James II’s daughter) to take the Crown as joint sovereigns. This Glorious Revolution (1688, so-called because it was bloodless) was accompanied by a Bill of Rights, which made it obligatory for the sovereign to rule with Parliament’s assistance and outlawed Catholicism for all Englishmen, including the King.
Exercise 8. Summarize the passage by answering the following questions.
1. Why was the monarchy restored?
2. What did the King need in order to be able to govern the country?
3. What was the original difference between the Whig and Tory Parties?
4. Why did James II lose the support of the Tories?
5. Why was the Bill of Rights so important?
Дата публикования: 2014-10-23; Прочитано: 1057 | Нарушение авторского права страницы | Мы поможем в написании вашей работы!