Reading Sir Thomas Smith's 'De Republica Anglorum' as Protestant apologetic

Authors
Citation
A. Mclaren, Reading Sir Thomas Smith's 'De Republica Anglorum' as Protestant apologetic, HIST J, 42(4), 1999, pp. 911-939
Citations number
53
Categorie Soggetti
History
Journal title
HISTORICAL JOURNAL
ISSN journal
0018246X → ACNP
Volume
42
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
911 - 939
Database
ISI
SICI code
0018-246X(199912)42:4<911:RSTS'R>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
This article argues that historians have misread Sir Thomas Smith's famous work as a narrowly factual description of English society and institutions, and Smith himself as proto-rationalist thinker. Instead, De republica angl orum represents Smith's attempt as a citizen of the elect nation to theoriz e the 'mixed monarchy' inaugurated with Elizabeth's accession. It should th us be read as an important contribution to English Protestant apologetic of the 1560s, in conjunction with the work of men who more obviously engaged in that discourse: John Foxe, Laurence Humphrey, and John Aylmer. The artic le makes this case by reconstituting three cultural contexts which I argue need to be taken into account when analysing Smith's text. The first establ ishes Smith's ideological concerns and convictions in Edward VI's reign and in the early years of Elizabeth's. The second focuses on the immediate cir cumstances in which Smith wrote De republica anglorum: a polemical exchange between the Englishman Walter Haddon and the Portuguese Osorio da Fonseca concerning religious reformation and kingship. I then analyse De republica anglorum with reference to the key terms and issues identified in these con texts. The conclusion locates Smith's text in relation to one further conte xt: Claude de Seyssel's The monarchy of France and its use by French Huguen ot theorists in the 1560s. That nexus enabled Smith satisfactorily to addre ss the central problem with which he and fellow apologists grappled through out Elizabeth's reign: ungodly kingship in the guise of female rule.