Description

Book Synopsis

Much has been written about Charles I's reign, about the brutal civil war into which his pursuit of unfettered power plunged the realm, and about the Commonwealth regime that followed his defeat and execution. His reign is one that shaped the future of the British monarchy, and his legacy still remains with us today.

The Prisoner King provides an examination of the crucial period encompassing Charles I's captivity after his surrender to the Scots at Newark in May 1646. Not only were the subsequent months before his trial a time when the human dimension of the king's predicament assumed intensity, they were also a critical watershed when the entire nation stood at the most fateful of crossroads.

For Charles himself as subterfuge, espionage and assassination rumours escalated on all fronts, escape attempts foundered, and tensions with his absent wife mounted agonisingly the test was supreme. Yet, in a painful passage involving both stubborn impenitence and uncommon fortitude in the face of barbarous usage' by his captors, the Man of Blood' would ultimately come to merit his unique place in history as England's martyr king'.

The Prisoner King

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Wed 10 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by John Matusiak

    2 in stock


      View other formats and editions of The Prisoner King by John Matusiak

      Publisher: The History Press Ltd
      Publication Date: 1/29/2025
      ISBN13: 9781803999401, 978-1803999401
      ISBN10: 1803999403

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Much has been written about Charles I's reign, about the brutal civil war into which his pursuit of unfettered power plunged the realm, and about the Commonwealth regime that followed his defeat and execution. His reign is one that shaped the future of the British monarchy, and his legacy still remains with us today.

      The Prisoner King provides an examination of the crucial period encompassing Charles I's captivity after his surrender to the Scots at Newark in May 1646. Not only were the subsequent months before his trial a time when the human dimension of the king's predicament assumed intensity, they were also a critical watershed when the entire nation stood at the most fateful of crossroads.

      For Charles himself as subterfuge, espionage and assassination rumours escalated on all fronts, escape attempts foundered, and tensions with his absent wife mounted agonisingly the test was supreme. Yet, in a painful passage involving both stubborn impenitence and uncommon fortitude in the face of barbarous usage' by his captors, the Man of Blood' would ultimately come to merit his unique place in history as England's martyr king'.

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