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Page 1: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms

Gabriel Glickman

Page 2: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

James VI and I

Page 3: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

Royal depositions and assassinations

• 1567- deposition of Mary, Queen of Scots

• 1584 – assassination of Prince William of Orange by Balthasar Gerard (French Catholic)

• 1589 – assassination of Henri III by Jacques Clement (Dominican friar)

• 1610 – assassination of Henri IV by Francois Ravaillac

Page 4: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

Andrew Melville (1545-1622)

‘there are two kings and two kingdoms in Scotland: there is king James, the head of the commonwealth; and there is Christ Jesus, the king of the Church, whose subject James the Sixth is, and of whose kingdom he is not a king, not a lord, not a head, but a member’.

Page 5: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

Political thought of James VI

• “it follows of necessitie, that the Kinges were the authors & makers of the lawes, and not the laws of Kings... The King is above the law”(Basilikon Doron).

• “this pernicious opinion; that Popes may tosse the French King his Throne like a tennis ball, and that killing of Kinges is an acte meritorious to the purchase of the crowne of Martyrdome”. (An Apologie for the Oath of Allegiance).

• Union of England and Scotland “a perfect union, a blessed union... Reuniting of these two mightie, famous and ancient Kingdomes of England and Scotland, under one Imperiall Crowne”, speech in Westminster parliament, 1604.

Page 6: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

James I, coronation medal

Page 7: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

Union Jack, 1606

Page 8: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

Michael Drayton, Poly-Olbion (1612)

Page 9: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

Forms of political union in C17th Europe

• Dynastic union: king only common element e.g. England and Scotland, 1603.

• Confederal union: some shared common institutions but local institutions still most powerful entities e.g. United Provinces.

• Incorporating union: one country assimilated into the institutions of another – e.g. Spanish Indies, status of Wales under English crown.

Bacon and Savile – only an incorporating union will be stable and durable.

Page 10: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

Core elements to Jacobean Union policy

1. Attempted legal and parliamentary union of England and Scotland 1603-1608.

2. Religious union –establishment of common Protestant Church united under King James Bible, 1611-1618.

3. Plantation of Ulster as a full ‘British venture’. Francis Bacon - ‘unions and plantations are the very nativities and birthdays of kingdoms’

Page 12: A ‘perfect union’? James VI and his three kingdoms Gabriel Glickman.

John Donne, Meditation, XVII (1624) - written against the background of European war

“No man is an island,Entire of itself.

Each is a piece of the continent,A part of the main.

If a clod be washed away by the sea,Europe is the less.”


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