Alternative title | Opposing the Spanish Match: Thomas Scott’s Vox Populi (1620) |
Author | Álvarez Recio, Leticia
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Department | Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Filología Inglesa (Literatura Inglesa y Norteamericana) |
Date | 2009 |
Published in |
SEDERI: yearbook of the Spanish and Portuguese Society for English Renaissance Studies, 19, 5-22.
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Abstract | The beginning of negotiations in 1614 for a dynastic marriage
between Prince Charles and the Infanta Maria of Spain caused great
concern among English people who still held strong anti-Catholic
and anti-Spanish prejudices. ...
The beginning of negotiations in 1614 for a dynastic marriage
between Prince Charles and the Infanta Maria of Spain caused great
concern among English people who still held strong anti-Catholic
and anti-Spanish prejudices. King James’s decision in 1618 to use the
marriage negotiations in order to mediate in the confessional conflict
in Europe added to this concern. England was then politically
divided between those willing to help James’s son-in-law, Frederick,
who had accepted the Bohemian crown following the rebellion of the
Protestant estates against the Habsburg King Ferdinand, and those
who supported the Stuart monarch’s decision to keep England safe
from continental struggles.
Despite the censorship of the state, a group of writers began a
campaign against the Spanish Match which had a great influence on
public opinion. Among the most prominent of these was Thomas
Scott, whose first work, Vox Populi (1620), became one of the most
controversial political tracts of the period. This article analyses Scott’s
pamphlet and considers how he also made use of the discourse
against Catholicism and Spain to introduce further commentaries on
the monarchical system and the citizens’ right to participate in
government
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Citation | Álvarez Recio, L. (2009). Pamphlet literature the Anglo-Spanish match: Thomas Scott's "Vox Populi" (1620). SEDERI: yearbook of the Spanish and Portuguese Society for English Renaissance Studies, 19, 5-22. |