"The political institutions of England were peculiar. In a manner quite unknown elsewhere, its monarchy combined high prerogative claims and exceptionally effective government with the absence of coercive power and an instinctive regard for the supremacy of the law. Its Parliament uniquely combined co-operation in government with the satisfaction of the subject's needs: no other representative institution in Europe was so firmly integrated into the monarchical system of government, so thoroughly organised for routine business, so flexibly able to accommodate all interests. In England taxes fell most heavily on the wealthier part of the nation, an oddity which provides perhaps the most striking contrast of all to European custom β which in this respect was to grant exemption to the powerful. English law, notoriously, was very different indeed... And these, and other, distinctions appear not only to the eye of the historian; they were very visible also to observers of the day. By the side of the often bemused and rarely commendatory reports of visitors from abroad there grew among Englishmen a strident selfconsciousness of separateness, from Richard Morison's "English hands and English hearts" peculiarly able to win against all odds, through John Aylmer's God who is English, to John Foxe's elect nation."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Jews from the United KingdomJews from GermanyPhilosophers from GermanyHistorians from GermanyEducators from Germany
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
'England and the Continent in the Sixteenth Century', introduction to Derek Baker (ed.), Reform and Reformation: England and the Continent (1979), quoted in G. R. Elton, Studies in Tudor and Stuart Politics and Government, Volume Three: Papers and Reviews 1973β1981 (1983), p. 307
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Geoffrey_Elton
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Geoffrey Elton
Sir Geoffrey Rudolph Elton FBA (born Gottfried Rudolf Otto Ehrenberg; 17 August 1921 β 4 December 1994) was a German-born British political and constitutional historian who specialised in the Tudor period. He taught at Clare College, Cambridge, and was the Regius Professor of Modern History there from 1983 to 1988.
35 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Geoffrey Elton β
Related Quotes
"English government has a special claim to be studied. It developed in comparative freedom from outside interference, β¦"
"The Reformation, then, was not the inevitable development of the text-books. Whether it would have come anyway it is β¦"
"[Replying to the criticism of J. P. Cooper] I hope to show that he has arrived at a mistaken view from partial, and pβ¦"
"Sir John Neale has shown how mistaken this view is: queen and Commons clashed frequently throughout the reign, but thβ¦"
"[O]nce...the early seventeenth century is treated as a sequence of events rather than the working out of a destiny β β¦"
"The history of England between 1603 and 1640 is not the history of a growing disease in the body politic, but of confβ¦"
"We need to see the sixteenth-century in terms of its own experience, not as the prehistory of a later revolution. We β¦"
"If we are to get further, we need at this present no essays on the causes of the civil war, but studies of the politiβ¦"
"In history there are no authorities: history is a free study in which no man can claim rule, or credence for his mereβ¦"
"The Act in Restraint of Appeals to Rome was a government measure, affected slightly by opposition from the church andβ¦"