ABSTRACT

Since publication in 1973 James I has established itself as one of the most popular short accounts of James I's reign. The First Edition was described by John Morrill as `a far better, shrewder, more incisive account of the reign' than the available competition Seventeenth-Century Britain, 1980. The text has now been entirely rewritten to take account of the latest historiography and students will continue to welcome this accessible analysis of the problems, weaknesses and achievements of James I as it enables them to participate in the revisionist arguments that make the study of this period so stimulating.

part 1|12 pages

The Background

chapter 1|12 pages

James VI of Scotland

part 2|88 pages

Analysis — James I

chapter 2|13 pages

Finance: The Canker of Want

chapter 3|16 pages

Crown, Court and Parliament

chapter 4|14 pages

Faction and Favourites

chapter 5|11 pages

The Jacobean Church

chapter 6|18 pages

Foreign Policy and the 1621 Parliament

chapter 7|16 pages

Foreign Policy and the 1624 Parliament

part 3|15 pages

Assessment

chapter 8|15 pages

‘A most just and Good King'

part 4|16 pages

Documents