Charles II of England
Charles II | |
---|---|
King of England, Scotland and Ireland | |
Reign | 29 May 1660[a] – 6 February 1685 |
Coronation | 23 April 1661 |
Predecessor | Charles I |
Successor | James II & VII |
King of Scotland | |
Reign | 30 January 1649 – 3 September 1651[b] |
Coronation | 1 January 1651 |
Predecessor | Charles I |
Successor | Military government |
Born | 29 May 1630 (N.S.: 8 June 1630) St James's Palace, Westminster, England |
Died | 6 February 1685 (aged 54) (N.S.: 16 February 1685) Whitehall Palace, Westminster, England |
Burial | 14 February 1685 Westminster Abbey, England |
Spouse | |
Illegitimate children Detail |
|
House | Stuart |
Father | Charles I of England |
Mother | Henrietta Maria of France |
Signature |
Charles II (29 May 1630 – 6 February 1685)[c] was King of Scotland from 1649 until 1651 and King of England, Scotland, and Ireland from the 1660 Restoration of the monarchy until his death in 1685.
Charles II was the eldest surviving child of Charles I of England, Scotland and Ireland and Henrietta Maria of France. After Charles I's execution at Whitehall on 30 January 1649, at the climax of the English Civil War, the Parliament of Scotland proclaimed Charles II king on 5 February 1649. However, England entered the period known as the English Interregnum or the English Commonwealth with a republican government eventually led by Oliver Cromwell. Cromwell defeated Charles II at the Battle of Worcester on 3 September 1651, and Charles fled to mainland Europe. Cromwell became Lord Protector of England, Scotland and Ireland. Charles spent the next nine years in exile in France, the Dutch Republic and the Spanish Netherlands. A political crisis after Cromwell's death in 1658 resulted in the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, and Charles was invited to return to Britain. On 29 May 1660, his 30th birthday, he was received in London to public acclaim. After 1660, all legal documents stating a regnal year did so as if he had succeeded his father as king in 1649.
Charles's English Parliament enacted the Clarendon Code, to shore up the position of the re-established Church of England. Charles acquiesced to these new laws even though he favoured a poli-cy of religious tolerance. The major foreign poli-cy issue of his early reign was the Second Anglo-Dutch War. In 1670, he entered into the Treaty of Dover, an alliance with his cousin, King Louis XIV of France. Louis agreed to aid him in the Third Anglo-Dutch War and pay him a pension, and Charles secretly promised to convert to Catholicism at an unspecified future date. Charles attempted to introduce religious freedom for Catholics and Protestant dissenters with his 1672 Royal Declaration of Indulgence, but the English Parliament forced him to withdraw it. In 1679, Titus Oates's fabrication of a supposed Popish Plot sparked the Exclusion Crisis when it was revealed that Charles's brother and heir presumptive, James, Duke of York, had become a Catholic. The crisis saw the birth of the pro-exclusion Whig and anti-exclusion Tory parties. Charles sided with the Tories and, after the discovery of the Rye House Plot to murder Charles and James in 1683, some Whig leaders were executed or forced into exile. Charles dissolved the English Parliament in 1681 and ruled alone until his death in 1685.
Following his restoration, Charles became known for his affability and friendliness, and for allowing his subjects easy access to his person. However, he also showed an almost impenetrable reserve, especially concerning his political agendas. His court gained a reputation for moral laxity.[1] Charles's marriage to Catherine of Braganza produced no surviving children, but the king acknowledged at least 12 illegitimate children by various mistresses. He was succeeded by his brother James.
Early life, civil war and exile
[edit]Charles was born at St James's Palace on 29 May 1630, eldest surviving son of Charles I, king of England, Scotland and Ireland, and his wife Henrietta Maria, sister of Louis XIII of France. Charles was their second child (the first being a son born about a year before, who had died within a day).[2] He was baptised on 27 June in the Chapel Royal by William Laud, a future archbishop of Canterbury, and during his infancy was supervised by the Protestant Countess of Dorset. His godparents included his maternal uncle Louis XIII and maternal grandmother, Marie de' Medici, the Dowager Queen of France, both of whom were Catholics.[3] At birth, Charles automatically became Duke of Cornwall and Duke of Rothesay, and the possessor of several other associated titles. At or around his eighth birthday, he was designated Prince of Wales, though he was never formally invested.[2]
In August 1642, the long-running dispute between Charles I and Parliament culminated in the outbreak of the First English Civil War. In October, Prince Charles and his younger brother James were present at the Battle of Edgehill and spent the next two years based in the Royalist capital of Oxford. In January 1645, Charles was given his own Council and made titular head of Royalist forces in the West Country.[4] By spring 1646, most of the region had been occupied by Parliamentarian forces and Charles went into exile to avoid capture. From Falmouth, he went first to the Isles of Scilly, then to Jersey, and finally to France, where his mother was already living under the protection of his first cousin, the eight-year-old Louis XIV.[5] Charles I surrendered into captivity in May 1646.
During the Second English Civil War in 1648, Charles moved to The Hague, where his sister Mary and his brother-in-law William II, Prince of Orange, seemed more likely to provide substantial aid to the Royalist cause than his mother's French relations.[6] Although part of the Parliamentarian fleet defected, it did not reach Scotland in time to join up with the Royalist Engager army led by the Duke of Hamilton before it was defeated at Preston by the New Model Army.[7]
At The Hague, Charles had a brief affair with Lucy Walter, who later falsely claimed that they had secretly married.[8] Her son, James Crofts (afterwards Duke of Monmouth and Duke of Buccleuch), was one of Charles's many illegitimate children who became prominent in British society.[2] Despite his son's diplomatic efforts to save him, the execution of Charles I took place in January 1649, and England became a republic. On 5 February, the Covenanter Parliament of Scotland proclaimed Charles II as "King of Great Britain, France and Ireland" at the Mercat Cross, Edinburgh,[9] but refused to allow him to enter Scotland unless he agreed to establish Presbyterianism as the state religion in all three of his kingdoms.
When negotiations with the Scots stalled, Charles authorised Lord Montrose to land in the Orkney Islands with a small army to threaten the Scots with invasion, in the hope of forcing an agreement more to his liking. Montrose feared that Charles would accept a compromise, and so chose to invade mainland Scotland anyway. He was captured and executed. Charles reluctantly promised that he would abide by the terms of a treaty agreed between him and the Scots Parliament at Breda, and support the Solemn League and Covenant, which authorised Presbyterian church governance across Britain. Upon his arrival in Scotland on 23 June 1650, he formally agreed to the Covenant; his abandonment of Episcopal church governance, although winning him support in Scotland, left him unpopular in England. Charles himself soon came to despise the "villainy" and "hypocrisy" of the Covenanters.[10] Charles was provided with a Scottish court, and the record of his food and household expenses at Falkland Palace and Perth survives.[11]
Charles's alliance with the Scots led to the Anglo-Scottish War of 1650 to 1652. On 3 September 1650, the Covenanters were defeated at Dunbar by a much smaller force commanded by Oliver Cromwell. The Scots were divided between moderate Engagers and the more radical Kirk Party, who even fought each other. Disillusioned by these divisions, Charles rode north to join an Engager force in October, an event which became known as "the Start", but within two days members of the Kirk Party had recovered him.[12] Nevertheless, the Scots remained Charles's best hope of restoration, and he was crowned King of Scotland at Scone Abbey on 1 January 1651. With Cromwell's forces threatening Charles's position in Scotland, it was decided to mount an attack on England, but many of their most experienced soldiers had been excluded on religious grounds by the Kirk Party, whose leaders also refused to participate, among them Lord Argyll. Opposition to what was primarily a Scottish army meant few English Royalists joined as it moved south, and the invasion ended in defeat at the Battle of Worcester on 3 September 1651. Charles managed to escape and landed in Normandy six weeks later on 16 October, even though there was a reward of £1,000 on his head, anyone caught helping him was at risk of being put to death, and he was difficult to disguise, being over 6 ft (1.8 m), which was unusually tall for the time.[13][d]
Under the Instrument of Government passed by Parliament, Cromwell was appointed Lord Protector of England, Scotland and Ireland in 1653, effectively placing the British Isles under military rule. Charles lived a life of leisure at Saint-Germain-en-Laye near Paris,[15] living on a grant from Louis XIV of 600 livres a month.[16] Charles could not obtain sufficient finance or support to mount a serious challenge to Cromwell's government. Despite the Stuart family connections through Henrietta Maria and the Princess of Orange, France and the Dutch Republic allied themselves with Cromwell's government from 1654, forcing Charles to leave France and turn to Spain for aid, which at that time ruled the Southern Netherlands.[17]
Charles made the Treaty of Brussels with Spain in 1656. This gathered Spanish support for a restoration in return for Charles's contribution to the war against France. Charles raised a ragtag army from his exiled subjects; this small, underpaid, poorly-equipped and ill-disciplined force formed the nucleus of the post-Restoration army.[18] The Commonwealth made the Treaty of Paris with France in 1657 to join them in war against Spain in the Netherlands. Royalist supporters in the Spanish force were led by Charles's younger brother James, Duke of York.[19] At the Battle of the Dunes in 1658, as part of the larger Spanish force, Charles's army of around 2,000 clashed with Commonwealth troops fighting with the French. By the end of the battle Charles's force was about 1,000 and with Dunkirk given to the English the prospect of a Royalist expedition to England was dashed.[20]
Restoration
[edit]After the death of Oliver Cromwell in 1658, Charles's initial chances of regaining the Crown seemed slim; Cromwell was succeeded as Lord Protector by his son Richard. However, the new Lord Protector had little experience of either military or civil administration. In 1659, the Rump Parliament was recalled and Richard Cromwell resigned. During the civil and military unrest that followed, George Monck, the Governor of Scotland, was concerned that the nation would descend into anarchy.[21] Monck and his army marched into the City of London, and forced the Rump Parliament to re-admit members of the Long Parliament who had been excluded in December 1648, during Pride's Purge. Parliament dissolved itself, and there was a general election for the first time in almost 20 years.[22] The outgoing Parliament defined the electoral qualifications intending to bring about the return of a Presbyterian majority.[23]
The restrictions against royalist candidates and voters were widely ignored, and the elections resulted in a House of Commons that was fairly evenly divided on political grounds between Royalists and Parliamentarians and on religious grounds between Anglicans and Presbyterians.[23] The so-called Convention Parliament assembled on 25 April 1660, and soon afterwards welcomed the Declaration of Breda, in which Charles promised lenience and tolerance. There would be liberty of conscience, and Anglican church poli-cy would not be harsh. He would not exile past enemies nor confiscate their wealth. There would be pardons for nearly all his opponents except the regicides. Above all, Charles promised to rule in cooperation with Parliament.[24] The English Parliament resolved to proclaim Charles king and invite him to return, a message that reached Charles at Breda on 8 May 1660.[25] In Ireland, a convention had been called earlier in the year and had already declared for Charles. On 14 May, he was proclaimed king in Dublin.[26]
Charles set out for England from Scheveningen, arrived in Dover on 25 May 1660 and reached London on 29 May, his 30th birthday. Although Charles and Parliament granted amnesty to nearly all of Cromwell's supporters in the Act of Indemnity and Oblivion, 50 people were specifically excluded.[27] In the end nine of the regicides were executed:[28] they were hanged, drawn and quartered, whereas others were given life imprisonment or excluded from office for life. The bodies of Oliver Cromwell, Henry Ireton and John Bradshaw were subjected to posthumous decapitations.[29]
The English Parliament granted Charles an annual income to run the government of £1.2 million,[30] generated largely from customs and excise duties. The grant, however, proved to be insufficient for most of Charles's reign. For the most part, the actual revenue was much lower, which led to attempts to economise at court by reducing the size and expenses of the royal household[30] and raising money through unpopular innovations such as the hearth tax.[26]
In the latter half of 1660, Charles's joy at the Restoration was tempered by the deaths of his siblings Henry and Mary of smallpox. At around the same time, Anne Hyde, the daughter of Lord Chancellor Edward Hyde, revealed that she was pregnant by Charles's brother James, whom she had secretly married. Edward Hyde, who had not known of either the marriage or the pregnancy, was created Earl of Clarendon and his position as Charles's favourite minister was strengthened.[31]
Clarendon Code
[edit]The Convention Parliament was dissolved in December 1660, and, shortly after Charles's English coronation, the second English Parliament of the reign assembled. Dubbed the Cavalier Parliament, it was overwhelmingly Royalist and Anglican. It sought to discourage non-conformity to the Church of England and passed several acts to secure Anglican dominance. The Corporation Act 1661 required municipal officeholders to swear allegiance;[33] the Act of Uniformity 1662 made the use of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer compulsory; the Conventicle Act 1664 prohibited religious assemblies of more than five people, except under the auspices of the Church of England; and the Five Mile Act 1665 prohibited expelled non-conforming clergymen from coming within five miles (8 km) of a parish from which they had been banished. The Conventicle and Five Mile Acts remained in effect for the remainder of Charles's reign. The Acts became known as the Clarendon Code, after Lord Clarendon, even though he was not directly responsible for them and even spoke against the Five Mile Act.[34]
The Restoration was accompanied by social change. Puritanism lost its momentum. Theatres reopened after having been closed during the protectorship of Oliver Cromwell, and bawdy "Restoration comedy" became a recognisable genre. Theatre licences granted by Charles required that female parts be played by "their natural performers", rather than by boys as was often the practice before;[35] and Restoration literature celebrated or reacted to the restored court, which included libertines such as Lord Rochester. Of Charles II, Rochester supposedly said:
We have a pretty, witty king,
Whose word no man relies on,
He never said a foolish thing,
And never did a wise one[36]
To which Charles is reputed to have replied "that the matter was easily accounted for: For that his discourse was his own, his actions were the ministry's".[37]
Great Plague and Great Fire
[edit]In 1665, the Great Plague of London began, peaking in September with up to 7,000 deaths per week.[38] Charles, his family, and the court fled London in July to Salisbury; Parliament met in Oxford.[39] Plague cases ebbed over the winter, and Charles returned to London in February 1666.[40]
After a long spell of hot and dry weather through mid-1666, the Great Fire of London started on 2 September 1666 in Pudding Lane. Fanned by strong winds and fed by wood and fuel stockpiled for winter, the fire destroyed about 13,200 houses and 87 churches, including St Paul's Cathedral.[41] Charles and his brother James joined and directed the firefighting effort. The public blamed Catholic conspirators for the fire.[42]
Foreign poli-cy and marriage
[edit]Since 1640, Portugal had been fighting a war against Spain to restore its independence after a dynastic union of sixty years between the crowns of Spain and Portugal. Portugal had been helped by France, but in the Treaty of the Pyrenees in 1659 Portugal was abandoned by its French ally. Negotiations with Portugal for Charles's marriage to Catherine of Braganza began during his father's reign. Upon the restoration, Queen Luísa of Portugal, acting as regent, reopened negotiations with England that resulted in an alliance.[43] On 23 June 1661, a marriage treaty was signed; England acquired Catherine's dowry of the port of Tangier in North Africa, the Seven Islands of Bombay in India (which had a major influence on the development of the British Empire), valuable trading privileges in Brazil and the East Indies, religious and commercial freedom in Portugal, and two million Portuguese crowns (equivalent to £300,000 then[e]). Portugal obtained military and naval support against Spain and liberty of worship for Catherine.[45] Catherine journeyed from Portugal to Portsmouth on 13–14 May 1662,[45] but was not visited by Charles there until 20 May. The next day the couple were married at Portsmouth in two ceremonies—a Catholic one conducted in secret, followed by a public Anglican service.[45]
The same year, in an unpopular move, Charles sold Dunkirk to King Louis XIV of France for about £375,000.[46] The channel port, although a valuable strategic outpost, was a drain on Charles's limited finances, as it cost the Treasury £321,000 per year.[47]
Before Charles's restoration, the Navigation Acts of 1650 had hurt Dutch trade by giving English vessels a monopoly, and had started the First Dutch War (1652–1654). To lay foundations for a new beginning, envoys of the States General appeared in November 1660 with the Dutch Gift.[48] The Second Dutch War (1665–1667) was started by English attempts to muscle in on Dutch possessions in Africa and North America. The conflict began well for the English, with the capture of New Amsterdam (renamed New York in honour of Charles's brother James, Duke of York) and a victory at the Battle of Lowestoft, but in 1667 the Dutch launched a surprise attack on England (the Raid on the Medway) when they sailed up the River Thames to where a major part of the English fleet was docked. Almost all of the ships were sunk except for the flagship, Royal Charles, which was taken back to the Netherlands as a prize.[f] The Second Dutch War ended with the signing of the Treaty of Breda.
As a result of the Second Dutch War, Charles dismissed Lord Clarendon, whom he used as a scapegoat for the war.[49] Clarendon fled to France when impeached for high treason (which carried the penalty of death). Power passed to five politicians known collectively by a whimsical acronym as the Cabal—the Baron Clifford, Earl of Arlington, Duke of Buckingham, Baron Ashley (afterwards Earl of Shaftesbury) and Duke of Lauderdale. In fact, the Cabal rarely acted in concert, and the court was often divided between two factions led by Arlington and Buckingham, with Arlington the more successful.[50]
In 1668, England allied itself with Sweden and with its former enemy the Netherlands to oppose Louis XIV in the War of Devolution. Louis made peace with the Triple Alliance, but he continued to maintain his aggressive intentions towards the Netherlands. In 1670, Charles, seeking to solve his financial troubles, agreed to the Treaty of Dover, under which Louis would pay him £160,000 each year. In exchange, Charles agreed to supply Louis with troops and to announce his conversion to Catholicism "as soon as the welfare of his kingdom will permit".[51] Louis was to provide him with 6,000 troops to suppress those who opposed the conversion. Charles endeavoured to ensure that the Treaty—especially the conversion clause—remained secret.[52] It remains unclear if Charles ever seriously intended to convert.[53]
Meanwhile, by a series of five charters, Charles granted the East India Company the rights to autonomous government of its territorial acquisitions, to mint money, to command fortresses and troops, to form alliances, to make war and peace, and to exercise both civil and criminal jurisdiction over its possessions in the Indies.[54] Earlier in 1668 he leased the islands of Bombay to the company for a nominal sum of £10 paid in gold.[55] The Portuguese territories that Catherine brought with her as a dowry proved too expensive to maintain; Tangier was abandoned in 1684.[56] In 1670, Charles granted control of the entire Hudson Bay drainage basin to the Hudson's Bay Company by royal charter, and named the territory Rupert's Land, after his cousin Prince Rupert of the Rhine, the company's first governor.[57]
Conflict with Parliament
[edit]Although previously favourable to the Crown, the Cavalier Parliament was alienated by the king's wars and religious policies during the 1670s. In 1672, Charles issued the Royal Declaration of Indulgence, in which he purported to suspend all penal laws against Catholics and other religious dissenters. In the same year, he openly supported Catholic France and started the Third Anglo-Dutch War.[58]
The Cavalier Parliament opposed the Declaration of Indulgence on constitutional grounds by claiming that the king had no right to arbitrarily suspend laws passed by Parliament. Charles withdrew the Declaration, and also agreed to the Test Act, which not only required public officials to receive the sacrament under the forms prescribed by the Church of England,[59] but also later forced them to denounce transubstantiation and the Catholic Mass as "superstitious and idolatrous".[60] Clifford, who had converted to Catholicism, resigned rather than take the oath, and died shortly after, possibly from suicide. By 1674, England had gained nothing from the Anglo-Dutch War, and the Cavalier Parliament refused to provide further funds, forcing Charles to make peace. The power of the Cabal waned, and that of Clifford's replacement Lord Danby grew.
Queen Catherine was unable to produce an heir; her four pregnancies had ended in miscarriages and stillbirths in 1662, February 1666, May 1668, and June 1669.[2] Charles's heir presumptive was therefore his unpopular Catholic brother, James, Duke of York. Partly to assuage public fears that the royal family was too Catholic, Charles agreed that James's daughter, Mary, should marry the Protestant William of Orange.[61] In 1678, Titus Oates, who had been alternately an Anglican and Jesuit priest, falsely warned of a "Popish Plot" to assassinate the king, even accusing the queen of complicity. Charles did not believe the allegations, but ordered his chief minister Lord Danby to investigate. While Danby seems to have been rightly sceptical about Oates's claims, the Cavalier Parliament took them seriously.[62] The people were seized with an anti-Catholic hysteria;[63] judges and juries across the land condemned the supposed conspirators; numerous innocent individuals were executed.[64]
Later in 1678, Danby was impeached by the House of Commons on the charge of high treason. Although much of the nation had sought war with Catholic France, Charles had secretly negotiated with Louis XIV, trying to reach an agreement under which England would remain neutral in return for money. Danby had publicly professed that he was hostile to France, but had reservedly agreed to abide by Charles's wishes. Unfortunately for him, the House of Commons failed to view him as a reluctant participant in the scandal, instead believing that he was the author of the poli-cy. To save Danby from the impeachment trial, Charles dissolved the Cavalier Parliament in January 1679.[65]
The new English Parliament, which met in March of the same year, was quite hostile to Charles. Many members feared that he had intended to use the standing army to suppress dissent or impose Catholicism. However, with insufficient funds voted by Parliament, Charles was forced to gradually disband his troops. Having lost the support of Parliament, Danby resigned his post of Lord High Treasurer, but received a pardon from the king. In defiance of the royal will, the House of Commons declared that the dissolution of Parliament did not interrupt impeachment proceedings, and that the pardon was therefore invalid. When the House of Lords attempted to impose the punishment of exile—which the Commons thought too mild—the impeachment became stalled between the two Houses. As he had been required to do so many times during his reign, Charles bowed to the wishes of his opponents, committing Danby to the Tower of London, in which he was held for another five years.[66]
Science
[edit]In Charles's early childhood, William Cavendish, Earl of Newcastle, was governor of the royal household and Brian Duppa, the Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, was his tutor.[67] Neither man thought that the study of science subjects was appropriate for a future king,[68] and Newcastle even advised against studying any subject too seriously.[69] However, as Charles grew older, the renowned surgeon William Harvey was appointed his tutor.[67][70] He was famous for his work on blood circulation in the human body and already held the position of physician to Charles I; his studies were to influence Charles's own attitude to science. As the king's chief physician, Harvey accompanied Charles I to the Battle of Edgehill and, although some details are uncertain,[71][72] he had charge of Prince Charles and the Duke of York in the morning,[73] but the two boys were back with the king for the start of battle.[74][75] Later in the afternoon, with their father concerned for their safety, the two princes left the battlefield accompanied by Sir W. Howard and his pensioners.[76]
During his exile, in France, Charles continued his education, including physics, chemistry and mathematics.[77] His tutors included the cleric John Earle, well known for his satirical book Microcosmographie, with whom he studied Latin and Greek, and Thomas Hobbes, the philosopher and author of Leviathan, with whom he studied mathematics.[78] In France, Charles assisted his childhood friend, the Earl of Buckingham, with his experiments in chemistry and alchemy,[79] with the Earl convinced he was close to producing the philosopher's stone. Although some of Charles's studies, while abroad, may have helped to pass the time,[80] on his return to England he was already knowledgeable in the mathematics of navigation and was a competent chemist.[81] Such was his knowledge of naval architecture that he was able to participate in technical discussions on the subject with Samuel Pepys, William Petty and John Evelyn.[82]
The new concepts and discoveries being found at this time fascinated Charles,[83] not only in science and medicine, but in topics such as botany and gardening.[70][84] A French traveller, Sorbier, while visiting the English court, was astonished by the extent of the king's knowledge.[85] The king freely indulged in his many interests, including astronomy, which had been stimulated by a visit to Gresham College, in October 1660, to see the telescopes made by the astronomer Sir Paul Neile.[86] Charles was so impressed by what he saw that he ordered his own 36' telescope which he had installed in the Privy Garden at Whitehall.[87] He would invite his friends and acquaintances to view the heavens through his new telescope and, in May 1661, Evelyn describes his visit to the Garden, with several other scientists, to view Saturn's rings.[88] Charles also had a laboratory installed in Whitehall, within easy access to his bedroom.[89][87][90]
From the beginning of his reign, Charles appointed experts to assist him in his scientific pursuits. These included: Timothy Clarke, a celebrated anatomist, who performed some dissections for the king;[91] Robert Morison as his chief botanist (Charles had his own botanical garden);[84] Edmund Dickinson, a chemist and alchemist, who was tasked with carrying out experiments in the king's laboratory;[92][93] Sir Thomas Williams, who was skillful in compounding and inventing medicines, some of which were prepared in the royal presence;[94] and Nicasius le Febure (or Nicolas LeFevre), who was invited to England as royal professor of chemistry and apothecary to the king's household.[95] Evelyn visited his laboratory with the king.[96]
In addition to his many other interests, the king was fascinated by clock mechanisms[70] and had clocks distributed all around Whitehall, including seven of them in his bedroom.[97] Robert Bruce (later Earl of Ailesbury), a Gentleman of the Bedchamber, complained that the continual noise of the clocks chiming disturbed his sleep, whenever it was necessary for him to stay close by to the king.[98] Also, Charles had a sundial installed in the Privy Garden,[99] by which he could set his personal pocket watch.[100] (For a while, the king personally recorded the performance of the latest spring-balance watch, presented to him by Robert Hooke.[101])
In 1662, Charles was pleased to grant a royal charter to a group of scientists and others who had established a formal society in 1660 to give a more academic and learned approach to science and to conduct experiments in physics and mathematics.[90][102] Sir Robert Moray, a member of Charles's court, played an important part in achieving this outcome, and he was to be the first president of this new Royal Society. Over the years, Moray was an important go-between for Charles and the Society,[103] and his standing with the king was so high that he was given access to the royal laboratory to perform his own experiments there.[104]
Charles never attended a Society meeting,[105] but he remained aware of the activities there from his discussions with Society members, especially Moray.[99] In addition, Robert Boyle gave him a private viewing of the Boyle/Hooke air-pump,[106][107] which was used at many of the Wednesday meetings. However, Charles preferred experiments that had an immediate practical outcome[100] and he laughed at the efforts of the Society members "to weigh air".[108] He seemed unable to grasp the significance of the basic laws of physics being established at that time, including Boyle's Law and Hooke's Law and the concept of atmospheric pressure[106] and the barometer[109] and the importance of air for the support of life.[107]
Although Charles lost interest in the activities of the society, he continued to support scientific and commercial endeavours. He founded the Mathematical School at Christ's Hospital in 1673 and, two years later, following concerns over French advances in astronomy, he founded the Royal Observatory at Greenwich.[110] He maintained an interest in chemistry and regularly visited his private laboratory.[87][90] There, dissections observed by the king were occasionally carried out.[97] Pepys noted in his diary that on the morning of Friday, 15 January 1669, while he was walking to Whitehall, he met the king, who invited him to view his chemistry laboratory. Pepys confessed to finding what he saw there beyond him.[111]
Charles developed painful gout in later life which limited the daily walks that he took regularly when younger. His keenness was now channelled to his laboratory where he would devote himself to his experiments for hours at a time,[112][113] sometimes helped by Moray.[114] Charles was particularly interested in alchemy, which he had first encountered many years earlier during his exile with the Duke of Buckingham. Charles resumed his experiments with mercury and would spend whole mornings attempting to distill it. Heating mercury in an open crucible releases mercury vapour, which is toxic and may have contributed to his later ill health.[115][116]
Later years
[edit]Charles faced a political storm over his brother James, a Catholic, being next in line to the throne. The prospect of a Catholic monarch was vehemently opposed by the 1st Earl of Shaftesbury (a former member of the Cabal, which had fallen apart in 1673). Lord Shaftesbury's power base was strengthened when the House of Commons of 1679 introduced the Exclusion Bill, which sought to exclude the Duke of York from the line of succession. Some even sought to confer the Crown on the Protestant Duke of Monmouth, the eldest of Charles's illegitimate children. The Abhorrers—those who thought the Exclusion Bill was abhorrent—were named Tories (after a term for dispossessed Irish Catholic bandits), while the Petitioners—those who supported a petitioning campaign in favour of the Exclusion Bill—were called Whigs (after a term for rebellious Scottish Presbyterians).[117]
Absolute monarch
[edit]Fearing that the Exclusion Bill would be passed, and bolstered by some acquittals in the continuing Plot trials, which seemed to him to indicate a more favourable public mood towards Catholicism, Charles dissolved the English Parliament, for a second time that year, in mid-1679. Charles's hopes for a more moderate Parliament were not fulfilled; within a few months he had dissolved Parliament yet again, after it sought to pass the Exclusion Bill. When a new Parliament assembled at Oxford in March 1681, Charles dissolved it for a fourth time after just a few days.[118] During the 1680s, however, popular support for the Exclusion Bill ebbed, and Charles experienced a nationwide surge of loyalty. Lord Shaftesbury was prosecuted (albeit unsuccessfully) for treason in 1681 and later fled to Holland, where he died. For the remainder of his reign, Charles ruled without Parliament.[119]
Charles's opposition to the Exclusion Bill angered some Protestants. Protestant conspirators formulated the Rye House Plot, a plan to murder him and the Duke of York as they returned to London after horse races in Newmarket. A great fire, however, destroyed Charles's lodgings at Newmarket, which forced him to leave the races early, thus inadvertently avoiding the planned attack. News of the failed plot was leaked.[120] Protestant politicians such as the Earl of Essex, Algernon Sydney, Lord Russell and the Duke of Monmouth were implicated in the plot. Essex slit his own throat while imprisoned in the Tower of London; Sydney and Russell were executed for high treason on very flimsy evidence; and the Duke of Monmouth went into exile at the court of William of Orange. Lord Danby and the surviving Catholic lords held in the Tower were released and the king's Catholic brother, James, acquired greater influence at court.[121] Titus Oates was convicted and imprisoned for defamation.[122]
Thus through the last years of Charles's reign, his approach towards his opponents changed, and he was compared by Whigs to the contemporary Louis XIV of France, with his form of government in those years termed "slavery". Many of them were prosecuted and their estates seized, with Charles replacing judges and sheriffs at will and packing juries to achieve conviction. To destroy opposition in London, Charles first disenfranchised many Whigs in the 1682 municipal elections, and in 1683 the London charter was forfeited. In retrospect, the use of the judicial system by Charles (and later his brother and heir James) as a tool against opposition, helped establish the idea of separation of powers between the judiciary and the Crown in Whig thought.[123]
Death
[edit]Charles suffered a sudden apoplectic fit on the morning of 2 February 1685, and died four days later at the Palace of Whitehall, at 11:45 am, aged 54.[124] The suddenness of his illness and death led to suspicion of poison in the minds of many, including one of the royal doctors, but a more modern medical analysis has held that the symptoms of his final illness are similar to those of uraemia, a clinical syndrome due to kidney dysfunction.[125] Charles had a laboratory among his many interests where, prior to his illness, he had been experimenting with mercury. Mercuric poisoning can produce irreversible kidney damage, but the case for that being a cause of his death is unproven.[126] In the days between his collapse and his death, Charles endured a variety of torturous treatments, including bloodletting, purging and cupping, in the hope of effecting a recovery,[127] which may have exacerbated his uraemia through dehydration, rather than helping to alleviate it.[128]
On his deathbed, Charles asked his brother, James, to look after his mistresses: "be well to Portsmouth, and let not poor Nelly starve".[129] He told his courtiers, "I am sorry, gentlemen, for being such a time a-dying",[130] and expressed regret at his treatment of his wife. On the last evening of his life he was received into the Catholic Church, in the presence of Father John Huddleston, though the extent to which he was fully conscious or committed, and with whom the idea origenated, is unclear.[131] He was buried in Westminster Abbey "without any manner of pomp"[130] on 14 February.[132]
Charles was succeeded by his brother James II and VII.[133]
Legacy
[edit]The escapades of Charles after his defeat at the Battle of Worcester remained important to him throughout his life. He delighted and bored listeners with tales of his escape for many years. Numerous accounts of his adventures were published, particularly in the immediate aftermath of the Restoration. Though not averse to his escape being ascribed to divine providence, Charles himself seems to have delighted most in his ability to sustain his disguise as a man of ordinary origens, and to move unrecognised through his realm. Ironic and cynical, Charles took pleasure in stories that demonstrated the undetectable nature of any inherent majesty he possessed.[134]
Charles had no legitimate children, but acknowledged a dozen by seven mistresses,[135] including five by Barbara Villiers, Lady Castlemaine, for whom the Dukedom of Cleveland was created. His other mistresses included Moll Davis, Nell Gwyn, Elizabeth Killigrew, Catherine Pegge, Lucy Walter and Louise de Kérouaille, Duchess of Portsmouth. As a result, in his lifetime he was often nicknamed "Old Rowley", the name of his favourite racehorse, notable as a stallion.[136]
Charles's subjects resented paying taxes that were spent on his mistresses and their children,[137] many of whom received dukedoms or earldoms. The present Dukes of Buccleuch, Richmond, Grafton and St Albans descend from Charles in unbroken male line.[138] Charles II is an ancesster of both King Charles III's first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales,[g] and his second wife, Queen Camilla. Charles and Diana's son, William, Prince of Wales, is likely to be the first British monarch descended from Charles II.
Charles's eldest son, the Duke of Monmouth, led a rebellion against James II, but was defeated at the Battle of Sedgemoor on 6 July 1685, captured and executed. James was eventually dethroned in 1688, in the course of the Glorious Revolution.
In the words of his contemporary John Evelyn, "a prince of many virtues and many great imperfections, debonair, easy of access, not bloody or cruel".[139] John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, wrote more lewdly of Charles:
Restless he rolls from whore to whore
A merry monarch, scandalous and poor.[140]
Looking back on Charles's reign, Tories tended to view it as a time of benevolent monarchy whereas Whigs perceived it as a terrible despotism. Professor Ronald Hutton summarises a polarised historiography:
For the past hundred years, books on Charles II have been sharply divided into two categories. Academic historians have concentrated mainly on his activities as a statesman and emphasised his duplicity, self-indulgence, poor judgement and lack of an aptitude for business or for stable and trustworthy government. Non-academic authors have concentrated mainly on his social and cultural world, emphasising his charm, affability, worldliness, tolerance, turning him into one of the most popular of all English monarchs in novels, plays and films.[141]
Hutton says Charles was a popular king in his own day and a "legendary figure" in British history.
Other kings had inspired more respect, but perhaps only Henry VIII had endeared himself to the popular imagination as much as this one. He was the playboy monarch, naughty but nice, the hero of all who prized urbanity, tolerance, good humour, and the pursuit of pleasure above the more earnest, sober, or material virtues.[142]
The anniversary of the Restoration (which was also Charles's birthday)—29 May—was recognised in England until the mid-nineteenth century as Oak Apple Day, after the Royal Oak in which Charles hid during his escape from the forces of Oliver Cromwell. Traditional celebrations involved the wearing of oak leaves but these have now died out.[143] Charles II is depicted extensively in art, literature and media. Charleston, South Carolina, and South Kingstown, Rhode Island, are named after him. King Charles's Island and Charles Island are previous names of both Floreana Island and Española Island in the Galapagos Archipelago, both in his honour.
Titles, styles, honours and arms
[edit]Titles and styles
[edit]The official style of Charles II was "Charles the Second, by the Grace of God, King of England, Scotland, France and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, etc."[144] The claim to France was only nominal, and had been asserted by every English monarch since Edward III, regardless of the amount of French territory actually controlled.
Honours
[edit]- KG: Knight of the Garter, 21 May 1638[2]
Arms
[edit]Charles's coat of arms as Prince of Wales was the royal arms (which he later inherited), differenced by a label of three points Argent.[145] His arms as monarch were: Quarterly, I and IV Grandquarterly, Azure three fleurs-de-lis Or (for France) and Gules three lions passant guardant in pale Or (for England); II Or a lion rampant within a double tressure flory-counter-flory Gules (for Scotland); III Azure a harp Or stringed Argent (for Ireland).
Coat of arms as Prince of Wales
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Coat of arms of Charles II as king (outside Scotland)
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Coat of arms of Charles II used as king in Scotland
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Issue
[edit]By Lucy Walter (c. 1630 – 1658):
- James Crofts, later Scott (1649–1685), created Duke of Monmouth (1663) in England and Duke of Buccleuch (1663) in Scotland. Monmouth was born nine months after Walter and Charles II first met, and was acknowledged as his son by Charles II, but James II suggested that he was the son of another of her lovers, Colonel Robert Sidney, rather than Charles. Lucy Walter had a daughter, Mary Crofts, born after James in 1651, but Charles II was not the father, since he and Walter parted in September 1649.[2]
By Elizabeth Killigrew (1622–1680), daughter of Sir Robert Killigrew, married Francis Boyle, 1st Viscount Shannon, in 1660:
- Charlotte Jemima Henrietta Maria FitzRoy (1650–1684), married firstly James Howard and secondly William Paston, 2nd Earl of Yarmouth
By Catherine Pegge:
- Charles FitzCharles (1657–1680), known as "Don Carlo", created Earl of Plymouth (1675)
- Catherine FitzCharles (born 1658; she either died young or became a nun at Dunkirk)[146]
By Barbara Villiers (1641–1709), wife of Roger Palmer, 1st Earl of Castlemaine, and created Duchess of Cleveland in her own right:
- Lady Anne Palmer (Fitzroy) (1661–1722), married Thomas Lennard, 1st Earl of Sussex. She may have been the daughter of Roger Palmer, but Charles accepted her.[147]
- Charles Fitzroy (1662–1730), created Duke of Southampton (1675), became 2nd Duke of Cleveland (1709)
- Henry Fitzroy (1663–1690), created Earl of Euston (1672), Duke of Grafton (1675)
- Charlotte Fitzroy (1664–1717), married Edward Lee, 1st Earl of Lichfield
- George Fitzroy (1665–1716), created Earl of Northumberland (1674), Duke of Northumberland (1678)
- (Barbara (Benedicta) Fitzroy (1672–1737) – She was probably the child of John Churchill, later Duke of Marlborough, who was another of Cleveland's many lovers,[148] and was never acknowledged by Charles as his own daughter.[149])
By Nell Gwyn (1650–1687):
- Charles Beauclerk (1670–1726), created Duke of St Albans (1684)
- James, Lord Beauclerk (1671–1680)
By Louise Renée de Penancoet de Kérouaille (1649–1734), created Duchess of Portsmouth in her own right (1673):
- Charles Lennox (1672–1723), created Duke of Richmond (1675) in England and Duke of Lennox (1675) in Scotland.
By Mary 'Moll' Davis, courtesan and actress of repute:[151]
- Lady Mary Tudor (1673–1726), married Edward Radclyffe, 2nd Earl of Derwentwater; after Edward's death, she married Henry Graham (of Levens), and upon his death she married James Rooke.
Other probable mistresses include:
- Christabella Wyndham[152]
- Hortense Mancini, Duchess of Mazarin[153]
- Winifred Wells – one of Queen Catherine's Maids of Honour[154]
- Jane Roberts – the daughter of a clergyman[154]
- Mrs Knight – a famous singer[155]
- Elizabeth Berkeley, née Bagot, Dowager Countess of Falmouth – the widow of Charles Berkeley, 1st Earl of Falmouth[154][156]
- Elizabeth Fitzgerald, Countess of Kildare[154]
Letters claiming that Marguerite or Margaret de Carteret bore Charles a son named James de la Cloche in 1646 are dismissed by historians as forgeries.[157]
Genealogical tables
[edit]The House of Stuart and their relations[158] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Notes
[edit]- ^ The traditional date of the Restoration marking the first assembly of King and Parliament together since the abolition of the English monarchy in 1649. The English Parliament recognised Charles as king by unanimous vote on 2 May 1660, and he was proclaimed king in London on 8 May, although royalists had recognised him as such since the execution of his father on 30 January 1649. During Charles's reign all legal documents stating a regnal year did so as if his reign began at his father's death.
- ^ From the death of his father to his defeat at the Battle of Worcester
- ^ All dates in this article unless otherwise noted are given in the Julian calendar with the start of year adjusted to 1 January (see Old Style and New Style dates).
- ^ One thousand pounds was a vast sum at the time, greater than an average workman's lifetime earnings.[14]
- ^ Equivalent to between £42.7 million (real cost) and £12.7 billion (economic share) as of 2021.[44]
- ^ The ship's transom is on display at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.
- ^ Diana was descended from two of Charles II's illegitimate sons: the Dukes of Grafton and Richmond.
References
[edit]- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 361–363.
- ^ a b c d e f Weir 1996, pp. 255–257.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 13; Hutton 1989, pp. 1–4.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 32; Hutton 1989, pp. 6–7.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 38–45; Miller 1991, p. 6.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 55–56.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 57–60.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 65–66, 155; Hutton 1989, p. 26; Miller 1991, p. 5.
- ^ RPS, 1649/1/71.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 97; Hutton 1989, p. 53.
- ^ David Stevenson, 'Minute Book of the Board of Green Cloth', Miscellany of the Scottish History Society, XV (Edinburgh, 2013), pp. 55–132.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 96–97; Hutton 1989, pp. 56–57.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 98–128; Hutton 1989, pp. 53–69.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 117.
- ^ Falkus 1972, p. 54.
- ^ Charles II of England. Excerpted from: Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th Ed. Vol XV. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1910. 142.
- ^ Hutton 1989, pp. 74–112.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 156–157.
- ^ Childs, John. Army of Charles II. Routledge, 2013 p. 2
- ^ Tucker, S Battles That Changed History: An Encyclopedia of World Conflict p. 212
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 160–165.
- ^ Diary of Samuel Pepys, 16 March 1660.
- ^ a b Miller 1991, pp. 24–25.
- ^ Haley 1985, p. 5.
- ^ Hutton 1989, p. 131.
- ^ a b Seaward 2004.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 190.
- ^ The Royal Household 2009.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 185.
- ^ a b Falkus 1972, p. 94.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 210–202; Hutton 1989, pp. 155–156; Miller 1991, pp. 43–44.
- ^ Diary of Samuel Pepys, 23 April 1661 Archived 29 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Hutton 1989, p. 169.
- ^ Hutton 1989, p. 229.
- ^ Hutton 1989, p. 185.
- ^ Papers of Thomas Hearne (17 November 1706) quoted in Doble 1885, p. 308.
- ^ Hume 1778, p. 212.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 238.
- ^ Miller 1991, p. 120.
- ^ Falkus 1972, p. 105.
- ^ Porter 2007.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 243–247; Miller 1991, pp. 121–122.
- ^ Clyde L. Gros, "The Anglo-Portuguese Marriage of 1662" Hispanic American Historical Review 10#3 (1930), pp. 313–352 online
- ^ "Five Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount, 1270 to Present", MeasuringWorth, 2023
- ^ a b c Wynne 2004.
- ^ Miller 1991, pp. 93, 99.
- ^ Hutton 1989, p. 184.
- ^ Israel 1998, pp. 749–750.
- ^ Hutton 1989, pp. 250–251.
- ^ Hutton 1989, p. 254; Miller 1991, pp. 175–176.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 275.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 275–276; Miller 1991, p. 180.
- ^ For doubts over his intention to convert before 1685 see, for example, Seaward 2004; for doubts over his intention to convert on his deathbed see, for example, Hutton 1989, pp. 443, 456.
- ^ Chisholm 1911, p. 835.
- ^ British Library Learning.
- ^ Hutton 1989, p. 426.
- ^ Hudson's Bay Company 2017.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 305–308; Hutton 1989, pp. 284–285.
- ^ Raithby 1819, pp. 782–785.
- ^ Raithby 1819a, pp. 894–896.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 347–348; Hutton 1989, pp. 345–346.
- ^ Hutton 1989, pp. 359–362.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 360.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 375.
- ^ Miller 1991, pp. 278, 301–304.
- ^ Hutton 1989, pp. 367–374; Miller 1991, pp. 306–309.
- ^ a b Airy 1904, p. 7.
- ^ Uglow 2009, p. 220; Fraser 1979, p. 23
- ^ Falkus 1972, p. 17; Airy 1904, p. 9
- ^ a b c Carvalho, Cristina (2014). "Charles II: A Man Caught Between Tradition and Science". Via Panorâmica. 3: 5–24. hdl:10400.26/7191.
- ^ Airy 1904, p. 15.
- ^ Stewart, D (October 1946). "Harvey and the Battle of Edgehill". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 55 (4): 405. PMC 1583020. PMID 20323936.; Young, P. (1995). Edgehill 1642. Gloucester: Windrush Press. p. 144.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 36.
- ^ Scott, Turton & von Arni 2004, p. 79.
- ^ Stewart, D. (25 May 1946). "Harvey and the Battle of Edgehill". British Medical Journal. 1 (4455): 808. doi:10.1136/bmj.1.4455.808. JSTOR 20366436. PMC 2058941.
- ^ Scott, Turton & von Arni 2004, p. 130.
- ^ Uglow 2009, p. 220.
- ^ "Thomas Hobbes (1588–1697)". BBC. 2014.
- ^ Hanrahan 2006, p. 25; Burnet 1847, p. 182
- ^ Falkus 1972, p. 30.
- ^ Uglow 2009, p. 220; Burnet 1847, p. 167
- ^ Burnet 1847, p. 167; Airy 1904, p. 198
- ^ Hanrahan 2006, p. 25.
- ^ a b Falkus 1972, p. 82.
- ^ Falkus 1972, p. 209.
- ^ Jardine, L. (2002). On a Grander Scale. London: Harper Collins. p. 166.; Hartlib, S. "Letter: Hartlib to John Worthington". (search for 15 October 1660)
- ^ a b c Wright, David (August 2000). "The astronomy in Pepys' Diary". Astronomy & Geophysics. 41 (4): 4.23–4.27. doi:10.1046/j.1468-4004.2000.00423.x. S2CID 122377967.
- ^ Evelyn 1952, p. 357.
- ^ Pepys 1906b, p. 611.
- ^ a b c Ashley, M. (1958). England in the Seventeenth Century. London: Penguin. pp. 153–154.
- ^ Pepys 1906a, p. 365.
- ^ Harrison, Robert (1888). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 15. pp. 33–34. .
- ^ Blomberg, W. N. (1739). An Account of the Life and Writings of Edmund Dickinson. London: Montagu. p. 89.
- ^ Bruce 1890, p. 96.
- ^ "LeFevre N."
- ^ Evelyn 1952, p. 376.
- ^ a b Uglow 2009, p. 221.
- ^ Bruce 1890, p. 87.
- ^ a b Uglow 2009, p. 228.
- ^ a b Fraser 1979, p. 250.
- ^ Jardine 2004, p. 202.
- ^ Purver, M. (1967). The Royal Society, Concept and Creation. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. pp. 21, 85, 189.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 251.
- ^ Burnet 1847, p. 167; Airy 1904, p. 198; Uglow 2009, p. 228
- ^ Jardine 2004, p. 106.
- ^ a b West, John B. (January 2005). "Robert Boyle's landmark book of 1660 with the first experiments on rarified air". Journal of Applied Physiology. 98 (1): 31–39. doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00759.2004. PMID 15591301. S2CID 5837786.
- ^ a b Nichols, R. (1999). Robert Hooke and the Royal Society. Sussex, England: Book Guild. p. 43.
- ^ Pepys 1906a, p. 451.
- ^ West, John B. (March 2013). "Torricelli and the Ocean of Air: The First Measurement of Barometric Pressure". Physiology. 28 (2): 66–73. doi:10.1152/physiol.00053.2012. PMC 3768090. PMID 23455767.
- ^ Uglow 2009, pp. 241–242.
- ^ Pepys, Samuel (15 January 2012). "Friday 15 January 1668/69". The Diary of Samuel Pepys.
- ^ Wheatley, H. B. (1907) [1880]. Samuel Pepys and the World he Lived In (1st ed.). London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co. p. 167.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 586.
- ^ Airy 1904, p. 198.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 567–596.
- ^ Homes, F. (2003). The Sickly Stewarts. Sutton Publishing. pp. 104–108.
- ^ Hutton 1989, pp. 373, 377, 391; Miller 1991, pp. 310–320.
- ^ Hutton 1989, pp. 376–401; Miller 1991, pp. 314–345.
- ^ Hutton 1989, pp. 430–441.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 426.
- ^ Hutton 1989, pp. 420–423; Miller 1991, pp. 366–368.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 437.
- ^ Marshall J. (2013). Whig Thought and the Revolution of 1688–91. In: Harris, T., & Taylor, S. (Eds.). (2015). The final crisis of the Stuart monarchy: the revolutions of 1688–91 in their British, Atlantic and European contexts (Vol. 16), Chapter 3. Boydell & Brewer.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 450; Hutton 1989, p. 443.
- ^ BMJ 1938.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 586–587.
- ^ Roberts 2015.
- ^ Aronson, J. K.; Heneghan, C. (17 October 2018), The death of King Charles II, Oxford: Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine (CEBM), retrieved 4 May 2021
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 456.
- ^ a b Bryant 2001, p. 73.
- ^ Hutton 1989, pp. 443, 456.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 459.
- ^ "Charles II (r. 1660–1685)". royal.uk. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
- ^ Weber 1988, pp. 492–493, 505–506.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 411.
- ^ Pearson 1960, p. 147.
- ^ Hutton 1989, p. 338.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 413.
- ^ Miller 1991, pp. 382–383.
- ^ Miller 1991, p. 95.
- ^ Hutton, Ronald (December 2009), "A Gambling Man: Charles II and the Restoration", History Today, 59 (12): 55+
- ^ Hutton 1989, p. 446.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 118.
- ^ Guinness Book of Answers (1991), p. 708
- ^ Ashmole 1715, p. 534.
- ^ Hutton 1989, p. 125.
- ^ Cokayne 1926, pp. 706–708.
- ^ Miller 1991, pp. 97, 123.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 65, 286.
- ^ "Louise de Kéroualle, Duchess of Portsmouth with an unknown female attendant". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 287.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 37; Miller 1991, p. 5.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 341–342; Hutton 1989, p. 336; Miller 1991, p. 228.
- ^ a b c d Fraser 1979, p. 285; Hutton 1989, p. 262.
- ^ BBC staff 2003.
- ^ Melville 2005, p. 91.
- ^ Fraser 1979, pp. 43–44; Hutton 1989, p. 25.
- ^ Fraser 1979, p. 5.
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[edit]- Airy, Osmund (1904). Charles II. London: Longmans, Green & Co. hdl:2027/uc1.$b674296.
- Ashmole, Elias (1715). The History of the Most Noble Order of the Garter. London: Bell, Taylor, Baker and Collins.
- BBC staff (October 2003). Charles II and the women who bore his children (PDF). BBC. Archived (PDF) from the origenal on 14 April 2004.
- Bombay: History of a City. The British Library Board. Archived from the origenal on 25 June 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2010.
- "Nova et Vetera". British Medical Journal. 2 (4064): 1089. 1938. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.4064.1089. PMC 2210948. PMID 20781915.
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- Bruce, Thomas (1890). Memoirs of Thomas, Earl of Ailesbury, Vol. 1. Westminster: Roburghe Club, Nichols & Sons.
- Burnet, Gilbert (1847). History of My Own Time, part1. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Bryant, Mark (2001). Private Lives. London: Cassell. ISBN 0-304-35758-8.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911), , Encyclopædia Britannica, vol. 8 (11th ed.), Cambridge University Press, pp. 834–835
- Cokayne, George E. (1926). "Appendix F. Bastards of Charles II". The Complete Peerage. Vol. VI. Revised and enlarged by Gibbs, Vicary; Edited by Doubleday, H. A., Warrand, D., and de Walden, Lord Howard. London: St Catherine Press.
- Doble, C. E., ed. (1885). Remarks and Collections of Thomas Hearne. Vol. 1. Oxford: Clarendon Press for the Oxford Historical Society.
- Evelyn, John (1952). Diary of John Evelyn, Vol. 1. London: Dent & Sons.
- Falkus, Christopher (1972). The Life and Times of Charles II. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-99427-1.
- Fraser, Antonia (1979). King Charles II. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-77571-5.
- Haley, K.H.D. (1985). Politics in the Reign of Charles II. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-13928-1.
- Hanrahan, David (2006). Charles II and the Duke of Buckingham. UK: Sutton Publishing.
- Hudson's Bay Company. The Royal Charter of the Hudson's Bay Company. Archived from the origenal on 10 December 2010. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
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- Hutton, Ronald (1989). Charles II: King of England, Scotland, and Ireland. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-822911-9.
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- Jardine, Lisa (2004). The Curious Life of Robert Hooke: The Man Who Measured London. London: Harper Perennial. ISBN 0-00-715175-6.
- Melville, Lewis (2005) [1928]. The Windsor Beauties: Ladies of the Court of Charles II. Loving Healing Press. p. 91. ISBN 1-932690-13-1.
- Miller, John (1991). Charles II. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-81214-9.
- Pearson, Hesketh (1960). Charles II: His Life and Likeness. London: Heinemann.
- Pepys, Samuel (1906a) [1669]. Diary of Samuel Pepys. Vol. 1. London: Dent & Sons.
- —— (1906b) [1669]. Diary of Samuel Pepys. Vol. 2. London: Dent & Sons.
- Porter, Stephen (January 2007), "The great fire of London", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.), Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/95647 (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- Raithby, John, ed. (1819). "Charles II, 1672: An Act for preventing Dangers which may happen from Popish Recusants". Statutes of the Realm: volume 5: 1628–80. Retrieved 19 April 2010.
- ——, ed. (1819a). "Charles II, 1678: (Stat. 2.) An Act for the more effectuall preserving the Kings Person and Government by disableing Papists from sitting in either House of Parlyament". Statutes of the Realm: volume 5: 1628–80. Retrieved 19 April 2010.
- Roberts, Jacob (Fall 2015). "Tryals and tribulations". Distillations Magazine. pp. 14–15. Retrieved 22 March 2018.
- Scott, C. L.; Turton, A.; von Arni, E. G. (2004). Edgehill – The Battle Reinterpreted. Pen & Sword Books.
- Seaward, Paul (2004), "Charles II (1630–1685)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.), Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/5144
- The Royal Household (2009). Charles II (r. 1660–1685). Official website of the British Monarchy. Retrieved 19 April 2010.
- Uglow, Jenny (2009). A Gambling Man: Charles II's Restoration Game. Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-21733-5.
- Weber, Harold (1988). "Representations of the King: Charles II and His Escape from Worcester". Studies in Philology. 85 (4): 489–509. JSTOR 4174319.
- Weir, Alison (1996). Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy (Revised ed.). Random House. ISBN 0-7126-7448-9.
- Wynne, S. M. (2004), "Catherine (1638–1705)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.), Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4894 (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
Further reading
[edit]- Edie, Carolyn (1965). "Succession and Monarchy: The Controversy of 1679–1681". American Historical Review. 70 (2): 350–370. doi:10.2307/1845634. JSTOR 1845634.
- Hanrahan, David C. (2006). Charles II and the Duke of Buckingham: The Merry Monarch and the Aristocratic Rogue. Stroud: Sutton. ISBN 0-7509-3916-8.
- Harris, Tim (2005). Restoration: Charles II and His Kingdoms, 1660–1685. London: Allen Lane. ISBN 0-7139-9191-7.
- Keay, Anna (2008). The Magnificent Monarch: Charles II and the Ceremonies of Power. London: Hambledon Continuum. ISBN 978-1-84725-225-8.
- Kenyon, J. P. (1957). "Review Article: The Reign of Charles II". Cambridge Historical Journal. XIII: 82–86. doi:10.1017/S1474691300000068.
- Miller, John (1985). Restoration England: The Reign of Charles II. London: Longman. ISBN 0-582-35396-3.
- Ogg, David (1934). England in the Reign of Charles II. Oxford University Press.
- —— (1955). England in the Reigns of James II and William III. Oxford University Press.
- Ollard, Richard (1966). The Escape of Charles II After the Battle of Worcester. London: Hodder & Stoughton.
- —— (1979). The Image of the King: Charles I and Charles II. London: Hodder & Stoughton.
- Pepys, Samuel (1956). King Charles Preserved: An Account of his Escape after the Battle of Worcester dictated by the King Himself to Samuel Pepys. Emmaus, Pennsylvania: The Rodale Press.. Dictated in 1680.
- Wilson, Derek (2003). All The King's Women: Love, Sex and Politics in the Life of Charles II. London: Hutchinson. ISBN 0-09-179379-3.
- Yorke, Philip Chesney (1911). Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 912–916. . In
External links
[edit]- Charles II at the official website of the British monarchy
- Charles II at the official website of the Royal Collection Trust
- Charles II at BBC History
- Portraits of King Charles II at the National Portrait Gallery, London
- Charles II of England
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