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Ten Tudor Statesmen

Chapter 2: PREFATORY
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About This Book

The author presents ten compact studies of principal Tudor-era statesmen, examining careers, political ideas, administrative measures, and public actions rather than offering a comprehensive political history. Each chapter seeks to reconstruct its subject’s point of view to illuminate character, using episodes of finance, diplomacy, legal reform, religious policy, and court intrigue as evidence. The portraits trace rises from modest origins, the formulation and execution of policy, conflicts with sovereign authority, and the causes of fall or survival. Recurring themes include shifts in the centre of political power, the interaction of church and state, and the perilous nature of high office in an age of executions and exile.

PREFATORY

The series of studies contained in this volume is in no way a history of the Tudor period. My object in preparing it has been first to form in my own mind and secondly to present to my readers a clear and consistent conception of the character of sundry persons, who in their own day either exercised an effective influence on the course of politics, or embodied political ideas which have influenced succeeding generations. The events narrated are considered not in the light of their intrinsic importance, but as they bear on the particular character under investigation.

To arrive at a fair estimate of any man’s character, the primary necessity is to endeavour to realise his point of view, to appreciate his preconceptions. If we require of him that his preconceptions shall coincide with our own, we may reconstruct an interesting dramatic figure, but we shall not discover the man as he really was. And if we do succeed in placing ourselves at his point of view, we shall almost inevitably find that the man who ultimately emerges is different from, and probably somewhat better than, the man as we had previously conceived him.

Concerning these ten figures, two curious points may be noted. Eight of them may be described as ministers: not one of the eight was actually of noble birth, two were not even of gentle birth. That fact emphasises the change in the political centre of gravity which accompanied the establishment of the Tudor Dynasty. Secondly, of those eight, four perished on the scaffold and one at the stake: a sixth was in custody under accusation of treason when death released him. That illustrates not less emphatically the distance at which we stand from the Tudors to-day.

A. D. I.