Literature and the Polities of Family in Seventeenth-Century England
In 1615 James I ordered the publication of God and the King, which supported the obligation to take the oath of allegiance: the work announces itself to be “Imprinted by hisMaiesties speciall priuiledge and command.”1 Attributed to Richard Mocket, at the time warden of All Souls, Oxford, the pam...
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Cambridge University Press
2013
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oai:scholar.dlu.edu.vn:DLU123456789-356262014-01-19T23:42:14Z Literature and the Polities of Family in Seventeenth-Century England Su Fang, Ng Literature Polities In 1615 James I ordered the publication of God and the King, which supported the obligation to take the oath of allegiance: the work announces itself to be “Imprinted by hisMaiesties speciall priuiledge and command.”1 Attributed to Richard Mocket, at the time warden of All Souls, Oxford, the pamphlet defends divine right absolutism by making the patriarchal analogy linking father and king. Cast in the form of a dialogue, God and the King wastes little time in preliminaries. After a brief greeting, Philalethes, just come from a catechism, launches into a justification of monarchical authority by way of the fifth commandment. A good cathechumen, he recites the lesson that the names of father and mother include all other authorities, especially royal authority 2013-09-26T07:52:43Z 2013-09-26T07:52:43Z 2007 Book 978-0-511-26920-2 https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/35626 en application/pdf Cambridge University Press |
institution |
Thư viện Trường Đại học Đà Lạt |
collection |
Thư viện số |
language |
English |
topic |
Literature Polities |
spellingShingle |
Literature Polities Su Fang, Ng Literature and the Polities of Family in Seventeenth-Century England |
description |
In 1615 James I ordered the publication of God and the King, which supported
the obligation to take the oath of allegiance: the work announces
itself to be “Imprinted by hisMaiesties speciall priuiledge and command.”1
Attributed to Richard Mocket, at the time warden of All Souls, Oxford,
the pamphlet defends divine right absolutism by making the patriarchal
analogy linking father and king. Cast in the form of a dialogue, God and the
King wastes little time in preliminaries. After a brief greeting, Philalethes,
just come from a catechism, launches into a justification of monarchical
authority by way of the fifth commandment. A good cathechumen, he
recites the lesson that the names of father and mother include all other
authorities, especially royal authority |
format |
Book |
author |
Su Fang, Ng |
author_facet |
Su Fang, Ng |
author_sort |
Su Fang, Ng |
title |
Literature and the
Polities of Family in
Seventeenth-Century
England |
title_short |
Literature and the
Polities of Family in
Seventeenth-Century
England |
title_full |
Literature and the
Polities of Family in
Seventeenth-Century
England |
title_fullStr |
Literature and the
Polities of Family in
Seventeenth-Century
England |
title_full_unstemmed |
Literature and the
Polities of Family in
Seventeenth-Century
England |
title_sort |
literature and the
polities of family in
seventeenth-century
england |
publisher |
Cambridge University Press |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/35626 |
_version_ |
1819779752515338240 |