User:Sjc/Work in Progress
This is my page for outlines and drafts; please do not edit or amend in any way the contents.
The origins of the English Civil War are complex, despite the popular characterisation of them as being a consequence of a long-running series of disputes between king and Parliament. While this is superficially true, the roots of the war lie in fundamental changes in the society of mid-17th century England itself, in economic reasons, in class mistrust and antagonisms, in religious schisms, and in the will to power of certain key individuals.
Religious factors
[edit]The religious divisions of the Reformation, the Marian persecutions, as the balance of power swung between the Protestant and Catholic faiths in England, had left deep religious scars; the Protestants hated and feared the Catholics, who reciprocated in equal measure. Charles I did not endear himself to the preponderance of the English people with his marriage to the Roman Catholic French princess Henrietta Maria. Nor did his appointment of William Laud