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Glorious Revolution

The Glorious Revolution[a], known as the Glorieuze Overtocht or Glorious Crossing in the Netherlands, is the sequence of events leading to the deposition of King James II and VII of England, Ireland and Scotland in November 1688, and his replacement by his daughter Mary II and her husband and James's nephew William III of Orange, de facto ruler of the Dutch Republic. A term first used by John Hampden in late 1689, it has been notable in the years since for having been described as the last successful invasion of England as well as an internal coup, with differing interpretations from the Dutch and English perspectives respectively.[1][2]

Glorious Revolution
Part of the Nine Years' War
The Prince of Orange landing at Torbay,
by Jan Hoynck van Papendrecht
Date1688–1689
LocationBritish Isles
ParticipantsBritish and Dutch military forces
British and Irish society
Outcome

Despite his personal Catholicism, a religious denomination opposed by the Protestant majority in England and Scotland, James became king in February 1685 with widespread support in both countries, since many feared that his exclusion would lead to a repetition of the 1639–1653 Wars of the Three Kingdoms.[3] It was also considered a short-term issue, since James was 52, his second marriage remained childless after 11 years, and the heir presumptive was his Protestant elder daughter Mary. He alienated his supporters by suspending the Scottish and English parliaments in 1685 and ruling by personal decree over the next three years.[4]

These concerns were insufficient to spark a revolution, until two events in June 1688 turned dissent into a political crisis. The first on 10 June was the birth of a male heir James Francis Edward, who displaced Mary and for the first time created the prospect of a Catholic dynasty. The second was the decision to prosecute seven bishops for seditious libel, which many saw as the culmination of a series of attacks on the Church of England. Their acquittal on 30 June sparked anti-Catholic riots in England and Scotland and destroyed James's political authority, since his continued presence appeared a greater threat to stability than his removal. A broad coalition of English politicians, soldiers and religious leaders now invited William to intervene militarily and "protect the Protestant religion".

With Louis XIV of France preparing to attack the Dutch, William viewed this as an opportunity to secure English resources for what became the Nine Years' War, which began in September 1688. On 5 November, he landed in Brixham in Devon with 20,000 men and advanced on London engaging Jacobite troops loyal to James at Wincanton and Reading. Following the defection of Edward Hyde and John Churchill and other senior Protestant military officers most of the 30,000-strong British Army mobilised in southern England disintegrated. Attempts at negotiation between James and William broke down and on 23 December James fled the capital and went into exile. In April 1689, Parliament made William and Mary joint monarchs of England and Ireland. A separate but similar Scottish settlement was made in June.

While the Revolution itself was quick and relatively bloodless, pro-Stuart revolts in Scotland and Ireland caused significant casualties.[5] Although Jacobitism persisted into the late 18th century, the Revolution ended a century of political dispute by confirming the primacy of Parliament over the Crown, a principle established in the Bill of Rights 1689.[6] The Toleration Act 1688 granted freedom of worship to nonconformist Protestants, but restrictions on Catholics contained in the 1678 and 1681 English and Scottish Test Acts remained in force until 1828. Religious prohibitions on the monarch's choice of spouse were removed in 2015, but those applying to the monarch themselves remain.

Background

Despite his Catholicism, James became king in 1685 with widespread support, as demonstrated by the rapid defeat of the Argyll and Monmouth Rebellions; less than four years later, he was forced into exile.[7] Often seen as an exclusively English event, modern historians argue James failed to appreciate the extent to which Royal power relied at the local level on the landed gentry, and the loss of that support fatally damaged his regime. The vast majority of the gentry in England and Scotland were Protestant, while even in largely Catholic Ireland a disproportionate number were members of the Protestant Church of Ireland. Although willing to accept James' personal religious beliefs, his backers did so only so long as he maintained the primacy of the Protestant Church of England and Church of Scotland. When his policies appeared to undermine the existing political and religious order, the result was to alienate his English and Scottish supporters and destabilise Ireland.[8]

 
James II & VII, King of England, Scotland and Ireland, by Godfrey Kneller. National Portrait Gallery, London

Stuart political ideology derived from James VI and I, who in 1603 had created a vision of a centralised state, run by a monarch whose authority came from God, and where the function of Parliament was simply to obey.[9] Disputes over the relationship between king and Parliament led to the War of the Three Kingdoms and continued after the 1660 Stuart Restoration. Charles II came to rely on the Royal Prerogative since measures passed in this way could be withdrawn when he decided, rather than Parliament. However, it could not be used for major legislation or taxation.[10]

Concern that James intended to create an absolute monarchy led to the 1679 to 1681 Exclusion Crisis, dividing the English political class into those who wanted to 'exclude' him from the throne, mostly Whigs, and their opponents, mostly Tories. However, in 1685 many Whigs feared the consequences of bypassing the 'natural heir', while Tories were often strongly anti-Catholic and their support assumed the continued primacy of the Church of England. Most importantly, it was seen as a short-term issue; James was 52, his marriage to Mary of Modena remained childless after 11 years, and the heirs were his Protestant daughters, Mary and Anne.[11]

There was much greater sympathy in Scotland for a 'Stuart heir', and the 1681 Succession Act confirmed the duty of all to support him, 'regardless of religion.'[12] Over 95 percent of Scots belonged to the national church or kirk; even other Protestant sects were banned, and by 1680, Catholics were a tiny minority confined to parts of the aristocracy and the remote Highlands.[13] Episcopalians had regained control of the kirk in 1660, leading to a series of Presbyterian uprisings, but memories of the bitter religious conflicts of the Civil War period meant the majority preferred stability.[14]

In England and Scotland, most of those who backed James in 1685 wanted to retain existing political and religious arrangements, but this was not the case in Ireland. While he was guaranteed support from the Catholic majority, James was also popular among Irish Protestants, since the Church of Ireland depended on Royal support for its survival, while Ulster was dominated by Presbyterians who supported his tolerance policies. However, religion was only one factor; of equal concern for Catholics were laws barring them from serving in the military or holding public office, and land reform. In 1600, 90% of Irish land was owned by Catholics but following a series of confiscation during the 17th century, this had dropped to 22% in 1685. Catholic and Protestant merchants in Dublin and elsewhere objected to commercial restrictions placing them at a disadvantage to their English competitors.[15]

The political background in England

 
James's attempts to allow tolerance for English Catholics coincided with the October 1685 Edict of Fontainebleau revoking it for Huguenots

While James's supporters viewed hereditary succession as more important than his personal Catholicism, they opposed his policies of 'Tolerance' under which Catholics would be allowed to hold public office and engage in public life. Opposition was led by devout Anglicans[16] who argued that the measures he proposed were incompatible with the oath he had sworn as king to uphold the supremacy of the Church of England. In an age when oaths were seen as fundamental to a stable society, by demanding that Parliament approve his measures James was seen not only to be breaking his own word but requiring others to do the same. Parliament refused to comply, despite being "the most Loyal Parliament a Stuart ever had".[17]

Although historians generally accept James wished to promote Catholicism, not establish an Absolute monarchy, his stubborn and inflexible reaction to opposition had the same result. When the English and Scottish Parliaments refused to repeal the 1678 and 1681 Test Acts, he suspended them in November 1685 and ruled by decree. Attempts to form a 'King's party' of Catholics, English Dissenters and dissident Scottish Presbyterians was politically short-sighted, since it rewarded those who joined the 1685 rebellions and undermined his supporters.[18]

Demanding tolerance for Catholics was also badly timed. In October 1685 Louis XIV of France issued the Edict of Fontainebleau revoking the 1598 Edict of Nantes which had given French Protestants the right to practise their religion; over the next four years, an estimated 200,000 to 400,000 went into exile, 40,000 of whom settled in London.[19] Combined with Louis' expansionist policies and the killing of 2,000 Vaudois Protestants in 1686, it led to fears Protestant Europe was threatened by a Catholic counter-reformation.[20] These concerns were reinforced by events in Ireland; the Lord Deputy, the Earl of Tyrconnell, wanted to create a Catholic establishment able to survive James's death, which meant replacing Protestant officials at a pace that was inherently destabilising.[21]

Timeline of events: 1686 to 1688

 
The Seven Bishops prosecuted for seditious libel in 1688

The majority of those who backed James in 1685 did so because they wanted stability and the rule of law, qualities frequently undermined by his actions. After suspending Parliament in November 1685, he sought to rule by decree; although the principle was not disputed, the widening of its scope caused considerable concern, particularly when judges who disagreed with its application were dismissed.[22] He then alienated many by perceived attacks on the established church; Henry Compton, Bishop of London, was suspended for refusing to ban John Sharp from preaching after he gave an anti-Catholic sermon.[23]

He often made things worse by political clumsiness; to general fury, the Ecclesiastical Commission of 1686 established to discipline the Church of England included suspected Catholics like the Earl of Huntingdon.[24] This was combined with an inability to accept opposition; in April 1687, he ordered Magdalen College, Oxford, to elect a Catholic sympathiser named Anthony Farmer as president, but as he was ineligible under the college statutes, the fellows elected John Hough instead. Both Farmer and Hough withdrew in favour of another candidate selected by James, who then demanded the fellows personally apologise on their knees for 'defying' him; when they refused, they were replaced by Catholics.[25]

Attempts to create an alternative 'Kings Party' were never likely to succeed, for English Catholics were only 1.1% of the population and Nonconformists 4.4%.[26] Both groups were divided; since private worship was generally tolerated, Catholic moderates feared greater visibility would provoke a backlash. Among Nonconformists, while Quakers and Congregationalists supported repeal of the Test Acts, the majority wanted to amend the 1662 Act of Uniformity and be allowed back into the Church of England.[27] When James ensured the election of the Presbyterian John Shorter as Lord Mayor of London in 1687, he insisted on complying with the Test Act, reportedly because of a 'distrust of the King's favour...thus encouraging that which His Majesties whole Endeavours were intended to disannull.'[28]

 
James Francis Edward Stuart, circa 1703. His birth created the possibility of a Catholic dynasty

To ensure a compliant Parliament, James required potential MPs to be approved by their local Lord Lieutenant; eligibility for both offices required positive answers in writing to the 'Three Questions', one being a commitment to repeal of the Test Act.[29] In addition, local government and town corporations were purged to create an obedient electoral machine, further alienating the county gentry who had formed the majority of those who backed James in 1685.[30] On 24 August 1688, writs were issued for a general election.[31]

The expansion of the military caused great concern, particularly in England and Scotland, where memories of the Civil War left huge resistance to standing armies.[32] In Ireland, Talbot replaced Protestant officers with Catholics; James did the same in England, while basing the troops at Hounslow appeared a deliberate attempt to overawe Parliament.[33] In April 1688, he ordered his Declaration of Indulgence read in every church; when the Archbishop of Canterbury and six other bishops refused, they were charged with seditious libel and confined in the Tower of London. Two events turned dissent into a crisis; the birth of James Francis Edward Stuart on 10 June created the prospect of a Catholic dynasty, while the acquittal of the Seven Bishops on 30 June destroyed James's political authority.[34]

Dutch intervention

Prelude: 1685 to June 1688

 
French Huguenot refugees. Their expulsion in 1685 was one in a series of events that created a sense that Protestant Europe was under threat

In 1677, James's elder daughter and heir Mary married her Protestant cousin William of Orange, stadtholder of the main provinces of the Dutch Republic. The two initially shared common objectives in wanting Mary to succeed her father, while French ambitions in the Spanish Netherlands threatened both English and Dutch trade.[35] Although William sent James troops to help suppress the 1685 Monmouth Rebellion, their relationship deteriorated thereafter.[36]

The Franco-Dutch War, continued French expansion, and expulsion of the Huguenots meant William assumed another war was inevitable, and although the States General of the Netherlands preferred peace, the majority accepted he was correct. This view was widely shared throughout Protestant Europe; in October 1685, Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg renounced his French alliance for one with the Dutch. In July 1686, other Protestant states formed the anti-French League of Augsburg, with Dutch support; securing or neutralising English resources, especially the Royal Navy, now became key to both sides.[37]

 
William III, King of England, Scotland and Ireland, stadtholder of Guelders, Holland, Zealand, Utrecht and Overijssel. School of Willem Wissing, after Peter Lely.

Following a skirmish between French and Dutch naval vessels in July 1686, William concluded English neutrality was not enough and he needed their active support in the event of war.[38] His relationship with James was affected by the fact both men relied on advisors with relatively limited views; in William's case, mainly English and Scots Presbyterian exiles, the latter with close links to the Protestant minority in Ireland, who saw Tyrconnell's policies as a threat to their existence. Having largely alienated his Tory support base, James depended on a small circle of Catholic converts like Sunderland, Melfort and Perth.[39]

Suspicions increased when James sought William's backing for repealing the Test Acts; he predictably refused, further damaging their relationship.[40] Having previously assumed he was guaranteed English support in a war with France, William now worried he might face an Anglo-French alliance, despite assurances by James he had no intention of doing so. Historians argue these assurances were genuine, but James did not appreciate the distrust caused by his domestic policies.[41] In August 1687, William's cousin de Zuylestein travelled to England with condolences on the death of Mary of Modena's mother, allowing him to make contact with the political opposition. Throughout 1688, his English supporters provided William detailed information on public opinion and developments, very little of which was intercepted.[42]

In October 1687, after fourteen years of marriage and multiple miscarriages, it was announced the Queen was pregnant, Melfort immediately declaring it was a boy. When James then wrote to Mary urging her to convert to Catholicism, it convinced many he was seeking a Catholic heir, one way or the other and may have been a deciding factor in whether to invade.[43] Early in 1688, a pamphlet circulated in England written by Dutch Grand Pensionary Gaspar Fagel; this guaranteed William's support for freedom of worship for Dissenters and retaining the Test Acts, unlike James who offered tolerance in return for repeal.[44][45]

In April 1688, Louis XIV announced tariffs on Dutch herring imports, along with plans to support the Royal Navy in the English Channel. James immediately denied making any such request, but fearing it was the prelude to a formal alliance, the Dutch began preparing a military intervention.[46] On the pretext of needing additional resources to deal with French privateers, in July the States General authorised an additional 9,000 sailors and 21 new warships.[47]

Invitation to William

English support was vital for a successful invasion, and at the end of April William met with Edward Russell, who was acting as unofficial envoy for the Whig opposition. In a conversation recorded by the exiled Gilbert Burnet, he asked for a formal invitation from key leaders asking him to "rescue the nation and the religion", with a projected date of end September.[48] William later claimed he was 'forced' to take control of the conspiracy when Russell warned him the English would rise against James even without his help and he feared this would lead to a republic, depriving his wife of her inheritance.[49] This version is disputed, but in June he sent Zuylestein to England once again, ostensibly to congratulate James on his new son, in reality to co-ordinate with his supporters.[50]

The birth of the Prince of Wales and prospect of a Catholic successor ended the 'wait for better times' policy advocated by those like Halifax. This led to the production of the Invitation to William, signed by seven representatives from the key constituencies whose support William needed in order to commit to an invasion. They included the land magnates Danby and Devonshire, one a Whig, one a Tory; Henry Compton, Bishop of London, for the church; Shrewsbury and Lumley the army, and finally Russell and Sydney for the navy.[51]

We have great reason to believe, we shall be every day in a worse condition than we are, and less able to defend ourselves, and therefore we do earnestly wish we might be so happy as to find a remedy before it be too late for us to contribute to our own deliverance ... the people are so generally dissatisfied with the present conduct of the government, in relation to their religion, liberties and properties (all which have been greatly invaded), and they are in such expectation of their prospects being daily worse, that your Highness may be assured, there are nineteen parts of twenty of the people throughout the kingdom, who are desirous of a change; and who, we believe, would willingly contribute to it, if they had such a protection to countenance their rising, as would secure them from being destroyed.

— invitation by The Seven.[52]

Intended for public consumption, the Invitation was drafted by Sidney, later described as "the great wheel on which the Revolution rolled".[42] It claimed "nineteen parts of twenty...throughout the kingdom desired a change", that "much the greatest part of the nobility and gentry" were dissatisfied, that the army was divided, while "very many of the common soldiers do daily shew such an aversion to the Popish religion, that there is the greatest probability imaginable of great numbers of deserters ... and amongst the seamen...there is not one in ten who would do them any service in such a war". They promised to rally to William upon his landing in England and to "do all that lies in our power to prepare others to be in as much readiness as such an action is capable of"; finally, they stressed the importance of acting quickly.[53]

On 30 June, the same day the bishops were acquitted, the Invitation was carried to The Hague by Rear Admiral Herbert, disguised as a common sailor. Meanwhile, William's confidante Willem Bentinck launched a propaganda campaign in England; in numerous pamphlets, William was presented as a true Stuart, but unlike James and his brother Charles, one free from the vices of crypto-Catholicism, absolutism, and debauchery. Much of the "spontaneous" support for William on his landing was organised by Bentinck and his agents.[54]

Dutch preparations: July to September 1688

 
The Dutch were concerned by their vulnerable eastern border. In 1672, an alliance with the Electorate of Cologne allowed France to nearly over-run the Republic.

William's key strategic purpose was creating a defensive coalition that would block further French expansion in Europe, an objective not shared by the majority of his English supporters. In 1672, an alliance with the Electorate of Cologne had enabled France to bypass Dutch forward defences and nearly over-run the Republic, so ensuring an anti-French ruler was vital to prevent a repetition. As an ecclesiastical principality of the Holy Roman Empire, Cologne's ruler was nominated by Pope Innocent XI, in conjunction with Emperor Leopold I.[55] Both Louis and James were in dispute with Innocent over the right to appoint Catholic bishops and clergy; when the old Elector died in June 1688, Innocent and Leopold ignored the French candidate in favour of Joseph Clemens of Bavaria.[56]

After 1678, France continued its expansion into the Rhineland, including the 1683 to 1684 War of the Reunions, additional territorial demands in the Palatinate, and construction of forts at Landau and Traben-Trarbach.[57] This presented an existential threat to Habsburg dominance, guaranteeing Leopold's support for the Dutch, and negating French attempts to build German alliances.[58] William's envoy Johann von Görtz assured Leopold English Catholics would not be persecuted and intervention was to elect a free Parliament, not depose James, a convenient fiction that allowed him to remain neutral.[59]

Although his English supporters considered a token force sufficient, William assembled 260 transport ships and 15,000 men, nearly half the 30,000 strong Dutch States Army. With France on the verge of war, their absence was of great concern to the States General and Bentinck hired 13,616 German mercenaries to man Dutch border fortresses, freeing elite units like the Scots Brigade for use in England.[60] The increase could be presented as a limited precaution against French aggression, as the Dutch would typically double or triple their army strength in wartime;[b] William instructed his experienced deputy Schomberg to prepare for a campaign in Germany.[62]

Decision to invade

 
A Dutch herring fleet. French tariffs on this lucrative trade helped William build domestic support for military intervention

At the beginning of September, an invasion remained in the balance, with the States General fearing a French attack via Flanders while their army was in England. However, the surrender of Belgrade on 6 September seemed to presage an Ottoman collapse and release Austrian resources for use in Germany. Hoping to act before Leopold could respond and relieve pressure on the Ottomans, Louis attacked Philippsburg. With France now committed in Germany, this greatly reduced the threat to the Dutch.[63]

Instead, Louis attempted to intimidate the States General, and on 9 September, his envoy D'Avaux handed them two letters. The first warned an attack on James meant war with France, the second any interference with French operations in Germany would end with the destruction of the Dutch state.[64] Both misfired; convinced Louis was trying to drag him into war, James told the Dutch there was no secret Anglo-French alliance against them, although his denials only increased their suspicions. By confirming France's primary objective was the Rhineland, the second allowed William to move troops from the eastern border to the coast, even though most of the new mercenaries had yet to arrive.[65]

On 22 September, the French seized over 100 Dutch ships, many owned by Amsterdam merchants; in response, on 26 September the Amsterdam City Council agreed to back William.[66] This was a significant decision since the Council dominated the States of Holland, the most powerful political body in the Dutch Republic which contributed nearly 60% of its budget. French troops entered the Rhineland on 27 September and in a secret session held on 29th, William argued for a pre-emptive strike, as Louis and James would "attempt to bring this state to its ultimate ruin and subjugation, as soon as they find the occasion". This was accepted by the States, with the objective left deliberately vague, other than making the English "King and Nation live in a good relation, and useful to their friends and allies, and especially to this State".[67]

Following their approval, the Amsterdam financial market raised a loan of four million guilders in only three days, with further financing coming from various sources, including two million guilders from the banker Francisco Lopes Suasso.[68][c] The biggest concern for Holland was the potential impact on the Dutch economy and politics of William becoming ruler of England; the claim he had no intention of "removing the King from the throne" was not believed. These fears were arguably justified; William's access to English resources permanently diminished Amsterdam's power within the Republic and its status as the world's leading commercial and financial centre.[70]

English defensive strategy

 
Admiral Dartmouth, who spent more time on monitoring his disaffected captains than operational planning

Neither James nor Sunderland trusted Louis, correctly suspecting that his support would continue only so long as it coincided with French interests, while Mary of Modena claimed his warnings were simply an attempt to drag England into an unwanted alliance.[71] As a former naval commander, James appreciated the difficulties of a successful invasion, even in good weather, and as they moved into autumn the likelihood seemed to diminish. With the Dutch on the verge of war with France, he did not believe the States General would allow William to make the attempt; if they did, his army and navy were strong enough to defeat it.[72]

Reasonable in theory, his reliance on the loyalty and efficiency of the military proved deeply flawed. Both the army and the navy remained overwhelmingly Protestant and anti-Catholic; in July, only personal intervention by James prevented a naval mutiny when a Catholic captain held Mass on his ship. The transfer of 2,500 Catholics from the Royal Irish Army to England in September led to clashes with Protestant troops, some of his most reliable units refused to obey orders, and many of their officers resigned.[73]

When James demanded the repatriation of all six regiments of the Scots Brigade in January 1688,[74] William refused but used the opportunity to purge those considered unreliable, a total of 104 officers and 44 soldiers.[75] Some may have been Williamite agents, such as Colonel Belasyse, a Protestant with over 15 years of service who returned to his family estates in Yorkshire and made contact with Danby. The promotion of Catholic former Brigade officers like Thomas Buchan and Alexander Cannon to command positions led to the formation of the Association of Protestant Officers, which included senior veterans like Charles Trelawny, Churchill and Percy Kirke.[76]

On 14 August, Churchill offered their support to William, helping convince him it was safe to risk an invasion; although James was aware of the conspiracy, he took no action.[77] One reason may have been fears over the impact on the army; with a notional strength of 34,000, it looked impressive on paper but morale was brittle while many were untrained or lacked weapons. It also had to fill policing roles previously delegated to the militia, which had been deliberately allowed to decay; most of the 4,000 regular troops brought from Scotland in October had to be stationed in London to keep order. In October, attempts were made to restore the militia but many members were reportedly so angry at the changes made to local corporations, James was advised it was better not to raise them.[78]

 
Lord Danby, one of the Immortal Seven and William's agent in Northern England

Widespread discontent and growing hostility to the Stuart regime was particularly apparent in North-East and South-West England, the two landing places identified by William. A Tory whose brother Jonathan was one of the Seven Bishops, Trelawny's commitment confirmed support from a powerful and well-connected West Country bloc, allowing access to the ports of Plymouth and Torbay. In the north, a force organised by Belasyse and Danby prepared to seize York, its most important city, and Hull, its largest port.[79]

Herbert had been replaced by Dartmouth as commander of the fleet when he defected in June but many captains owed him their appointments and were of doubtful loyalty. Dartmouth suspected Berkeley and Grafton of plotting to overthrow him; to monitor them, he placed their ships next to his and minimised contact between the other vessels to prevent conspiracy.[80] Lack of funds meant exclusive of fireships and light scouting vessels, only 16 warships available in early October, all third rates or fourth rates, short of both men and supplies.[81]

While The Downs was the best place to intercept a cross-Channel attack, it was also vulnerable to a surprise assault, even for ships fully manned and adequately provisioned. Instead, James placed his ships in a strong defensive position near Chatham Dockyard, believing the Dutch would seek to establish naval superiority before committing to a landing.[82] While this had been the original plan, winter storms meant conditions deteriorated rapidly for those on the transports; William therefore decided to sail in convoy and avoid battle.[83] The easterly winds that allowed the Dutch to cross prevented the Royal Navy leaving the Thames estuary and intervening.[82]

The English fleet was outnumbered 2:1, undermanned, short of supplies and in the wrong place. Key landing locations in the South-West and Yorkshire had been secured by sympathisers, while both army and navy were led by officers whose loyalty was questionable. Even early in 1686, foreign observers doubted the military would fight for James against a Protestant heir and William claimed only to be securing the inheritance of his wife Mary. While still a dangerous undertaking, the invasion was less risky than it seemed.[84]

Invasion

Embarkation of the army and the Declaration of The Hague

 
Equestrian portrait of William III by Jan Wyck, commemorating the landing at Brixham, Torbay, 5 November 1688

The Dutch preparations, though carried out with great speed, could not remain secret. The English envoy Ignatius White, the Marquess d'Albeville, warned his country: "an absolute conquest is intended under the specious and ordinary pretences of religion, liberty, property and a free Parliament". Louis threatened an immediate declaration of war if William proceeded and sent James 300,000 livres.[85]

Embarkations, begun on 22 September (Gregorian calendar), had been completed on 8 October, and the expedition was that day openly approved by the States of Holland; the same day James issued a proclamation to the English nation that it should prepare for a Dutch invasion to ward off conquest. On 30 September/10 October (Julian/Gregorian calendars) William issued the Declaration of The Hague (actually written by Fagel), of which 60,000 copies of the English translation by Gilbert Burnet were distributed after the landing in England,[86] in which he assured that his only aim was to maintain the Protestant religion, install a free parliament and investigate the legitimacy of the Prince of Wales. He would respect the position of James. William declared:

It is both certain and evident to all men, that the public peace and happiness of any state or kingdom cannot be preserved, where the Laws, Liberties, and Customs, established by the lawful authority in it, are openly transgressed and annulled; more especially where the alteration of Religion is endeavoured, and that a religion, which is contrary to law, is endeavoured to be introduced; upon which those who are most immediately concerned in it are indispensably bound to endeavour to preserve and maintain the established Laws, Liberties and customs, and, above all, the Religion and Worship of God, that is established among them; and to take such an effectual care, that the inhabitants of the said state or kingdom may neither be deprived of their Religion, nor of their Civil Rights.

William went on to condemn James's advisers for overturning the religion, laws, and liberties of England, Scotland, and Ireland by the use of the suspending and dispensing power; the establishment of the "manifestly illegal" commission for ecclesiastical causes and its use to suspend the Bishop of London and to remove the Fellows of Magdalen College, Oxford. William also condemned James's attempt to repeal the Test Acts and the penal laws through pressuring individuals and waging an assault on parliamentary boroughs, as well as his purging of the judiciary. James's attempt to pack Parliament was in danger of removing "the last and great remedy for all those evils".[88]

"Therefore", William continued, "we have thought fit to go over to England, and to carry over with us a force sufficient, by the blessing of God, to defend us from the violence of those evil Counsellors ... this our Expedition is intended for no other design, but to have, a free and lawful Parliament assembled as soon as is possible".[88] On 4/14 October, William responded to the allegations by James in a second declaration, denying any intention to become king or to conquer England, a claim which remains controversial.[89]

The swiftness of the embarkations surprised all foreign observers. Louis had in fact delayed his threats against the Dutch until early September because he assumed it then would be too late in the season to set the expedition in motion anyway, if their reaction proved negative; typically such an enterprise would take at least some months.[90] Being ready after the last week of September / first week of October would normally have meant that the Dutch could have profited from the last spell of good weather, as the autumn storms tend to begin in the third week of that month. However, this year they came early. For three weeks, the invasion fleet was prevented by adverse south-westerly gales from departing from the naval port of Hellevoetsluis and Catholics all over the Netherlands and the British kingdoms held prayer sessions that this "popish wind" might endure. However, on 14/24 October, it became the famous "Protestant Wind" by turning to the east.[91]

Crossing and landing

 
William boarding Den Briel

Although most of the warships were provided by the Admiralty of Amsterdam, the expedition was officially treated as a private affair, with the States General allowing William use of the Dutch army and fleet.[58] For propaganda purposes, English admiral Arthur Herbert was nominally in command, but in reality operational control remained with Lieutenant-Admiral Cornelis Evertsen the Youngest and Vice-Admiral Philips van Almonde.[92] Accompanied by Willem Bastiaensz Schepers, the Rotterdam shipping magnate who provided financing, William boarded the frigate Den Briel on 16/26 October.[d].[93][94] Roughly twice the size of the Spanish Armada,[90] the fleet included 49 warships, 76 transports for the soldiers, 120 for the 5,000 horses required by the cavalry and supply train and 40,000 men on board of which 9,500 were sailors of the Dutch navy.[95][96][e]

Having departed on 19/29 October, the expedition was halfway across the North Sea when it was scattered by a gale, forcing the Brill back to Hellevoetsluis on 21/31 October. William refused to go ashore and the fleet reassembled, having lost only one ship but nearly a thousand horses; press reports deliberately exaggerated the damage and claimed the expedition might be postponed until next spring.[98] Dartmouth and his senior commanders considered taking advantage of this by blockading Hellevoetsluis, then decided against it, partly because the stormy weather made it dangerous but also because they could not rely on their men.[99]

William replaced his losses and departed when the wind changed on 1/11 November, this time heading for Harwich where Bentinck had prepared a landing site. It has been suggested this was a feint to divert some of Dartmouth's ships north, which proved to be the case and when the wind shifted again, the Dutch armada sailed south into the Strait of Dover.[98] In doing so, they twice passed the English fleet, which was unable to intercept because of the adverse winds and tides.[100]

 
William landed at Torbay, whose sheltered position makes the weather unusually moderate (note non-native cabbage trees)

On 3/13 November, the invasion fleet entered the English Channel in an enormous formation 25 ships deep, the troops lined up on deck, firing musket volleys, colours flying and military bands playing. Intended to awe observers with its size and power, Rapin de Thoyras later described it as "the most magnificent and affecting spectacle...ever seen by human eyes". The same wind blowing the Dutch down the Channel kept Dartmouth confined in the Thames estuary; by the time he was able to make his way out, he was too far behind to stop William reaching Torbay on 5 November.[101]

As anticipated, the French fleet remained in the Mediterranean, in order to support an attack on the Papal States if needed,[90] while a south-westerly gale now forced Dartmouth to shelter in Portsmouth harbour and kept him there for two days, allowing William to complete his disembarkation undisturbed.[102] His army totalled around 14,000-15,000,[f][90][95] consisting of around 11,000 infantry, including nearly 5,000 members of the elite Anglo-Scots Brigade and Dutch Blue Guards, 3,660 cavalry and an artillery train of twenty-one 24-pounder cannon.[103][104]

Some 5,000 volunteers, consisting of British exiles and Huguenots, also accompanied the fleet. William brought them along to accelerate English army reforms, because they could replace the soldiers who were loyal to James.[95] William brought weapons to equip another 20,000 men, although the subsequent and rapid collapse of James' army meant the 12,000 local volunteers who joined by 20 November were eventually dismissed.[105]

The collapse of James's rule

 
 
Salisbury
 
Faversham
 
London
 
Torbay
 
Wincanton
 
Exeter
 
Portsmouth
 
Hungerford
 
Reading
 
Plymouth
class=notpageimage|
Key locations in November 1688

Panicked by the prospect of invasion, James met with the bishops on 28 September, offering concessions; five days later they presented demands, which included restoring the religious position to that prevailing in February 1685, along with free elections for a new Parliament. Although they hoped this would allow James to remain king, in reality there was little chance of this, since at a minimum he would have to disinherit his son, enforce the Test Acts, and accept the supremacy of Parliament, all of which were unacceptable. In addition, by now his Whig opponents did not trust him to keep his promises, while Tories like Danby were too committed to William to escape punishment.[106]

Although his veteran force had the capability of defeating the largely untested recruits of the Royal Army, William and his English supporters preferred to avoid bloodshed and allow the regime to collapse on its own. Landing in Torbay provided space and time for this, while heavy rainfall forced a slow advance regardless and to avoid alienating the local population by looting, his troops were well supplied and paid three months in advance. When he entered Exeter on 9 November in an elaborate procession,[g] he publicly pronounced his objectives were securing the rights of his wife and a free Parliament. Despite these precautions, there was little enthusiasm for either James or William and the general mood was one of confusion and distrust.[108] After Danby had the Declaration publicly read in York on 12 November, much of the northern gentry confirmed their backing and the document was widely distributed.[109]

On 19 November, James joined his main force of 19,000 at Salisbury, but it soon became apparent his army was not eager to fight and the loyalty of his commanders doubtful. Three regiments sent out on 15 November to make contact with William promptly defected, while supply problems left the rest short of food and ammunition. On 20 November, dragoons led by Irish Catholic Patrick Sarsfield clashed with Williamite scouts at Wincanton; along with a minor skirmish at Reading on 9 December, also featuring Sarsfield, these were the only substantial military actions of the campaign. After securing his rear by taking Plymouth on 18 November, William began his advance on 21 November, while Danby and Belasyse captured York and Hull several days later.[79]

James' commander Feversham and other senior officers advised retreat. Lacking information on William's movements, unable to rely on his own soldiers, worn out by lack of sleep and debilitating nose-bleeds, on 23 November James agreed.[110] Next day Churchill, Grafton and Princess Anne's husband George deserted to William, followed by Anne herself on 26 November. The next day, James held a meeting at Whitehall Palace with those peers still in London; with the exception of Melfort, Perth and other Catholics, they urged him to issue writs for a Parliamentary election and negotiate with William.[111]

On 8 December, Halifax, Nottingham and Godolphin met with William at Hungerford to hear his demands, which included the dismissal of Catholics from public office and funding for his army. Many viewed these as a reasonable basis for a settlement but James decided to flee the country, convinced by Melfort and others that his life was threatened – a suggestion generally dismissed by historians. William made it clear he would not allow James to be harmed, most Tories wanted him to retain his throne, while the Whigs simply wanted to drive him out of the country by imposing conditions he would refuse.[106]

 
John Churchill, circa 1685. A close friend of James and uncle of his illegitimate son Berwick, his defection to William was a serious blow

The Queen and Prince of Wales left for France on 9 December, James following separately on 10 December.[112] Accompanied only by Edward Hales and Ralph Sheldon, he made his way to Faversham in Kent seeking passage to France, first dropping the Great Seal in the River Thames in a last-ditch attempt to prevent Parliament being summoned.[113] In London, his flight and rumours of a "Papist" invasion led to riots and destruction of Catholic property, which quickly spread throughout the country. To fill the power vacuum, the Earl of Rochester set up a temporary government including members of the Privy Council and City of London authorities, but it took them two days to restore order.[114]

When news arrived James had been captured in Faversham on 11 December by local fishermen, Lord Ailesbury, one of his personal attendants, was sent to escort him back to London. On entering the city on 16 December, he was welcomed by cheering crowds. By making it seem that James remained in control, Tory loyalists hoped for a settlement which would leave them in government. To create an appearance of normality, he heard Mass and presided over a meeting of the Privy Council.[115][h] James made it clear to the French ambassador Paul Barillon that he still intended to escape to France. His few remaining supporters viewed his flight as cowardice, and a failure to ensure law and order criminally negligent.[116]

Happy to help him into exile, William recommended he relocate to Ham, largely because it was easy to escape from. James suggested Rochester instead, allegedly because his personal guard was there, in reality conveniently positioned for a ship to France. On 18 December, he left London with a Dutch escort as William entered, cheered by the same crowds who greeted his predecessor two days before.[117] On 22 December, Berwick arrived in Rochester with blank passports allowing them to leave England, while his guards were told that if James wanted to leave, "they should not prevent him, but allow him to gently slip through".[118] Although Ailesbury and others begged him to stay, he left for France on 23 December.[113]

The revolutionary settlement

 
William III and Mary II reigned jointly until her death in 1694, when William became sole monarch

James' departure significantly shifted the balance of power in favour of William, who took control of the provisional government on 28 December. Elections were held in early January for a Convention Parliament, which assembled on 22 January. The Whigs had a slight majority in the Commons and the Lords was dominated by the Tories, but both were led by moderates. Archbishop Sancroft and other Stuart loyalists wanted to preserve the line of succession; although they recognised keeping James on the throne was no longer possible, they preferred Mary either be appointed his regent or sole monarch.[119]

The next two weeks were spent debating how to resolve this issue, much to the annoyance of William, who needed a swift resolution; the situation in Ireland was rapidly deteriorating, while the French had over-run large parts of the Rhineland and were preparing to attack the Dutch.[120] At a meeting with Danby and Halifax on 3 February, he announced his intention to return home if the Convention did not appoint him joint monarch, while Mary let it be known she would only rule jointly with her husband. Faced with this ultimatum, on 6 February Parliament declared that in deserting his people James had abdicated and thus vacated the Crown, which was therefore offered jointly to William and Mary.[121]

Historian Tim Harris argues the most radical act of the 1688 Revolution was breaking the succession and establishing the idea of a "contract" between ruler and people, a fundamental rebuttal of the Stuart ideology of divine right.[122] While this was a victory for the Whigs, other pieces of legislation were proposed by the Tories, often with moderate Whig support, designed to protect the Anglican establishment from being undermined by future monarchs, including the Calvinist William. The Declaration of Right was a tactical compromise, setting out where James had failed and establishing the rights of English citizens, without agreeing their cause or offering solutions. In December 1689, this was incorporated into the Bill of Rights[123]

 
The coronation of William and Mary, Charles Rochussen

However, there were two areas that arguably broke new constitutional ground, both responses to what were viewed as specific abuses by James. First, the Declaration of Right made keeping a standing army without Parliamentary consent illegal, overturning the 1661 and 1662 Militia Acts and vesting control of the military in Parliament, not the Crown.[124] The second was the Coronation Oath Act 1688; the result of James' perceived failure to comply with that taken in 1685, it established obligations owed by the monarchy to the people.[125]

At their coronation on 11 April, William and Mary swore to "govern the people of this kingdom of England, and the dominions thereunto belonging, according to the statutes in Parliament agreed on, and the laws and customs of the same". They were also to maintain the Protestant Reformed faith and "preserve inviolable the settlement of the Church of England, and its doctrine, worship, discipline and government as by law established".[125]

Scotland and Ireland

 
Parliament House, where the Convention of Estates met in March 1689

While Scotland was not involved in the landing, by November 1688 only a tiny minority supported James. Many of those who accompanied William were Scots exiles, including Melville, the Argyll, his personal chaplain William Carstares and Gilbert Burnet.[126] News of James's flight led to celebrations and anti-Catholic riots in Edinburgh and Glasgow. Most members of the Scottish Privy Council went to London. On 7 January 1689, they asked William to take over government. Elections were held in March for a Scottish Convention, which was also a contest between Presbyterians and Episcopalians for control of the Kirk. While only 50 of the 125 delegates were classed as Episcopalian, they were hopeful of victory since William supported the retention of bishops.[127]

On 16 March a Letter from James was read out to the convention, demanding obedience and threatening punishment for non-compliance. Public anger at its tone meant some Episcopalians stopped attending the convention, claiming to fear for their safety and others changed sides.[128] The 1689–1691 Jacobite Rising forced William to make concessions to the Presbyterians, ended Episcopacy in Scotland and excluded a significant portion of the political class. Many later returned to the Kirk but Non-Juring Episcopalianism was the key determinant of Jacobite support in 1715 and 1745.[129]

The English Parliament held that James 'abandoned' his throne. The Convention argued that he 'forfeited' it by his actions, as listed in the Articles of Grievances.[130] On 11 April, the Convention ended James' reign and adopted the Articles of Grievances and the Claim of Right Act, making Parliament the primary legislative power in Scotland.[131] On 11 May, William and Mary accepted the Crown of Scotland; after their acceptance, the Claim and the Articles were read aloud, leading to an immediate debate over whether or not an endorsement of these documents was implicit in that acceptance.[citation needed][132][page needed]

Under the 1542 Crown of Ireland Act, the English monarch was automatically king of Ireland as well. Tyrconnell had created a largely Roman Catholic army and administration which was reinforced in March 1689 when James landed in Ireland with French military support; it took the two years of fighting of the Williamite War in Ireland before the new regime controlled Ireland.

Anglo-Dutch alliance

Though he had carefully avoided making it public, William's main motive in organising the expedition had been the opportunity to bring England into an alliance against France.[133] On 9 December 1688 he had already asked the States General to send a delegation of three to negotiate the conditions. On 18 February (Julian calendar) he asked the convention to support the Republic in its war against France. It refused, only consenting to pay £600,000 for the continued presence of the Dutch army in England.[citation needed] On 9 March (Gregorian calendar) the States General responded to Louis's earlier declaration of war by declaring war on France in return.

On 19 April (Julian calendar) the Dutch delegation signed a naval treaty with England. It stipulated that the combined Anglo-Dutch fleet would always be commanded by an Englishman, even when of lower rank.[citation needed] William and the Dutch were fine with this since the English land forces were largely fighting under Dutch officers.[134] The treaty also specified that the two parties would contribute in the ratio of five English vessels against three Dutch vessels, meaning in practice that the Dutch navy in the future would be smaller than the English.[citation needed] The Navigation Acts were not repealed. On 18 May the new Parliament allowed William to declare war on France. On 9 September 1689 (Gregorian calendar), William as King of England joined the League of Augsburg against France.[citation needed]

The decline of the Dutch Republic

Having England as an ally meant that the military situation of the Republic was strongly improved, but this very fact induced William to be uncompromising in his position towards France. This policy led to a large number of very expensive campaigns which were largely paid for with Dutch funds. In 1712 the Republic was financially exhausted and was forced to let its fleet deteriorate, making what was by then the Kingdom of Great Britain the dominant maritime power of the world.[135]

The Dutch economy, already burdened by the high national debt and concomitant high taxation, suffered from the other European states' protectionist policies, which its weakened fleet was no longer able to resist. To make matters worse, the main Dutch trading and banking houses moved much of their activity from Amsterdam to London after 1688. Between 1688 and 1720, world trade dominance shifted from the Republic to Britain.[135]

Assessment and historiography

While the 1688 revolution was labeled "Glorious" by Protestant preachers two decades later,[136] its historiography is complex, and its assessment disputed. Thomas Macaulay's account of the Revolution in The History of England from the Accession of James the Second exemplifies the "Whig history" narrative of the Revolution as a largely consensual and bloodless triumph of English common sense, confirming and strengthening its institutions of tempered popular liberty and limited monarchy.[137] Edmund Burke set the tone for that interpretation when he proclaimed that:

The Revolution was made to preserve our ancient indisputable laws and liberties, and that ancient constitution of government which is our only security for law and liberty.[138]

An alternative narrative emphasizes William's successful foreign invasion from the Netherlands, and the size of the corresponding military operation. Several researchers have emphasized that aspect, particularly after the third centenary of the event in 1988.[139] The historian J. R. Jones suggested that the invasion "should be seen ... as the first and arguably the only decisive phase of the Nine Years' War."[140] The invasion story is unusual because the establishment of a constitutional monarchy (a de facto republic, see Coronation Oath Act 1688) and Bill of Rights meant that the apparently invading monarchs, legitimate heirs to the throne, were prepared to govern with the English Parliament. It is difficult to classify the entire proceedings of 1687–1689 but it can be seen that the events occurred in three parts: conspiracy, invasion by Dutch forces, and "Glorious Revolution".[citation needed]

It has been argued that the invasion aspect had been downplayed as a result of British pride and effective Dutch propaganda, trying to depict the course of events as a largely internal English affair.[141] As the invitation was initiated by figures who had little influence, the legacy of the Glorious Revolution has been described as a successful propaganda act by William to cover up and justify his invasion.[142][page needed] The claim that William was fighting for the Protestant cause in England was used to great effect to disguise the military, cultural and political impact that the Dutch regime had on England.

A third version, proposed by Steven Pincus, underplays the invasion aspect but unlike the Whig narrative views the Revolution as a divisive and violent event that involved all classes of the English population, not just the main aristocratic protagonists.[143][page needed] Pincus argues that his interpretation echoes the widely held view of the Revolution in its aftermath, starting with its revolutionary labelling. Pincus argues that it was momentous especially when looking at the alternative that James was trying to enact – a powerful centralised autocratic state, using French-style "state-building". England's role in Europe and the country's political economy in the 17th century rebuts the view of many late-20th-century historians that nothing revolutionary occurred during the Glorious Revolution of 1688–89. Pincus says it was not a placid turn of events.[144]

In diplomacy and economics William III transformed the English state's ideology and policies. This occurred not because William III was an outsider who inflicted foreign notions on England but because foreign affairs and political economy were at the core of the English revolutionaries' agenda. The revolution of 1688–89 cannot be fathomed in isolation. It would have been inconceivable without the changes resulting from the events of the 1640s and 1650s. The ideas accompanying the Glorious Revolution were rooted in the mid-century upheavals. The 17th century was a century of revolution in England, deserving of the same scholarly attention that 'modern' revolutions attract.[144][page needed]

James II tried building a powerful militarised state on the mercantilist assumption that the world's wealth was necessarily finite and empires were created by taking land from other states. The East India Company was thus an ideal tool to create a vast new English imperial dominion by warring with the Dutch and the Mughal Empire in India. After 1689 came an alternative understanding of economics, which saw Britain as a commercial rather than an agrarian society. It led to the foundation of the Bank of England, the creation of Europe's first widely circulating credit currency and the commencement of the "Age of Projectors".[145] This subsequently gave weight to the view, advocated most famously by Adam Smith in 1776, that wealth was created by human endeavour and was thus potentially infinite.[146]

Impact

As a coup, albeit largely bloodless, its legitimacy rests in the will expressed separately by the Scottish and English Parliaments according to their respective legal processes.[147] On this point, the Earl of Shaftesbury declared in 1689, "The Parliament of England is that supreme and absolute power, which gives life and motion to the English government".[148] The Revolution established the primacy of parliamentary sovereignty, a principle still relevant in consultation with the 15 Commonwealth realms regarding succession issues.[clarification needed] The Bill of Rights 1689 formally established a system of constitutional monarchy and ended moves towards absolute monarchy by restricting the power of the monarch, who could no longer suspend laws, levy taxes, make royal appointments or maintain a standing army during peacetime without Parliament's consent. The British Army remains the military arm of Parliament, not the monarch, although the Crown is the source of all military executive authority.[149][page needed]

Unlike the 1638 to 1651 Wars of the Three Kingdoms, most ordinary people in England and Scotland were relatively untouched by the "Glorious Revolution", the majority of the bloodshed taking place in Ireland. As a consequence, some historians suggest that in England at least it more closely resembles a coup d'état, rather than a social upheaval such as the French Revolution.[150][i] This view is consistent with the original meaning of "revolution" as a circular process under which an old system of values is restored to its original position, with England's supposed "ancient constitution" being reasserted, rather than formed anew.[152] Contemporary English political thought, as expressed in John Locke's then popular social contract theory,[153] linked to George Buchanan's view of the contractual agreement between the monarch and their subjects,[154] an argument used by the Scottish Parliament as justification for the Claim of Right.

Under the Coronation Oath Act 1688, William had sworn to maintain the primacy of the Church of England, which both his native Dutch Reformed Church and the Church of Scotland viewed as ideologically suspect in both doctrine and use of bishops. This required a certain degree of religious flexibility on his part, especially as he needed to placate his Catholic allies, Spain and Emperor Leopold.[155] Despite promising legal toleration for Catholics in his Declaration of October 1688, William failed due to domestic opposition.[156] The Act of Toleration 1689 granted relief to Nonconformists but Catholic emancipation would be delayed until 1829.[157]

The Williamite War in Ireland can be seen as the source of later ethno-religious conflict, including The Troubles of the twentieth century. The Williamite victory in Ireland is still commemorated by the Orange Order for preserving British and Protestant supremacy in the country. In North America, the Glorious Revolution precipitated the 1689 Boston revolt in which a well-organised "mob" of provincial militia and citizens deposed the hated governor Edmund Andros. In New York, Leisler's Rebellion caused the colonial administrator, Francis Nicholson, to flee to England. A third event, Maryland's Protestant Rebellion was directed against the proprietary government, seen as Catholic-dominated.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Irish: An Réabhlóid Ghlórmhar; Scottish Gaelic: Rèabhlaid Ghlòrmhor; Welsh: Chwyldro Gogoneddus
  2. ^ At the end of the year the Dutch army counted more than 70,000 men[61]
  3. ^ When asked what security he desired, Suasso allegedly answered: "If you are victorious, you will surely repay me; if not, the loss is mine."[69]
  4. ^ His standard was hoisted, displaying the arms of Nassau quartered with those of England. The words Pro Religione et Libertate ("For Liberty and [the Protestant] Religion"), the slogan of William's ancestor William the Silent while leading the Dutch Revolt against Catholic Spain, were shown next to the House of Orange's motto, Je maintiendrai ("I will maintain")
  5. ^ There were seventy-five vessels of the confederated Dutch navy. Forty-nine were warships of more than twenty cannon. Eight of these could count as third rates of 60–68 cannon. Additionally there were nine frigates, twenty-eight galliots and nine fireships. Transports included seventy-six fluyts for the soldiers, 120 small transports with five thousand horses and about seventy supply vessels. Also, sixty fishing vessels served as landing craft.[97][96]
  6. ^ As was then common, many were foreigners, including Scots, English, German, Swiss, Swedes and Laplanders
  7. ^ After the magistrates had fled the city, he entered on a white palfrey, with the two hundred black men forming a guard of honour, dressed in white, with turbans and feathers.[107]
  8. ^ Those in attendance were William Hamilton, Duke of Hamilton, William Craven, 1st Earl of Craven, George Berkeley, 1st Earl of Berkeley, Charles Middleton, 2nd Earl of Middleton (Southern Secretary), Richard Graham, 1st Viscount Preston (Lord President of the Council and Northern Secretary), Sidney Godolphin, 1st Earl of Godolphin (Chamberlain to the Queen and Treasury Commissioner), John Trevor, Master of the Rolls, and Silius Titus.
  9. ^ The importance of the event has divided historians ever since Friedrich Engels judged it "a relatively puny event".[151]

Citations

  1. ^ Black 2016, p. 143; Padfield 1999.
  2. ^ Schwoerer 2004, p. 3.
  3. ^ Harris 2006, p. 144.
  4. ^ Harris & Taylor 2015, p. 147.
  5. ^ Pincus 2009, pp. 441–442.
  6. ^ Quinn.
  7. ^ Miller 1978, pp. 124–125.
  8. ^ Harris 1999, pp. 28–30.
  9. ^ Stephen 2010, pp. 55–58.
  10. ^ Miller 1978, p. 44.
  11. ^ Wormsley 2015, p. 189.
  12. ^ Jackson 2003, pp. 38–54.
  13. ^ Baker 2009, pp. 290–291.
  14. ^ Harris 2006, pp. 153–155.
  15. ^ Harris 2006, pp. 106–108.
  16. ^ Harris 1993, p. 124.
  17. ^ Wakeling 1896, p. 91.
  18. ^ Harris 2006, pp. 179–181.
  19. ^ Spielvogel 1980, p. 410.
  20. ^ Bosher 1994, pp. 6–8.
  21. ^ Harris 2006, p. 103.
  22. ^ Miller 1978, pp. 156–157.
  23. ^ Carpenter 1956, pp. 96–98.
  24. ^ Walker 1956, p. 81.
  25. ^ Harris 1993, p. 130.
  26. ^ Field 2012, p. 695.
  27. ^ Miller 1978, pp. 171–172.
  28. ^ Harris 2006, p. 235.
  29. ^ Miller 1978, pp. 127–129.
  30. ^ Jones 1988, p. 146.
  31. ^ Jones 1988, p. 150.
  32. ^ Childs 1987, p. 184.
  33. ^ Childs 1980, pp. 96–97.
  34. ^ Harris 2006, pp. 235–236.
  35. ^ Miller 1978, pp. 81–82.
  36. ^ Troost 2005, p. 175.
  37. ^ Stapleton 2003, pp. 63–64.
  38. ^ Troost 2001, p. 187.
  39. ^ Glozier 2000, pp. 233–234.
  40. ^ Miller 1978, pp. 213–214.
  41. ^ Harris 2006, pp. 256.
  42. ^ a b Jones 1988, p. 222.
  43. ^ Hoak 1996, p. 24.
  44. ^ Harris 2006, pp. 256–257.
  45. ^ Fagel 1688.
  46. ^ Troost 2005, p. 191.
  47. ^ Prud'homme van Reine 2009, p. 287.
  48. ^ Baxter 1966, p. 225.
  49. ^ Baxter 1966, p. 231.
  50. ^ Jones 1988, pp. 238–239.
  51. ^ Harris 2006, p. 271.
  52. ^ Dalrymple 1790, appendix to book v, pp. 107–110.
  53. ^ Harris 2006, p. 272.
  54. ^ Claydon & Levillain 2016, p. 150.
  55. ^ Miller 1978, p. 153.
  56. ^ Young 2004, pp. 251–252.
  57. ^ Duffy 1995, p. 20.
  58. ^ a b Troost 2005, p. 198.
  59. ^ Young 2004, p. 255.
  60. ^ Jardine 2008, p. 38.
  61. ^ Wijn 1950, p. 6.
  62. ^ Baxter 1966, pp. 232–233.
  63. ^ McKay & Scott 1984, p. 41.
  64. ^ Jardine 2008, p. 41.
  65. ^ Miller 1978, pp. 178–179.
  66. ^ Jardine 2008, pp. 39–40.
  67. ^ Jardine 2008, p. 37.
  68. ^ Jardine 2008, p. 52.
  69. ^ Swetschinsky & Schönduve 1988, p. 53.
  70. ^ Troost 2016, pp. 206–207.
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  72. ^ Miller 1978, p. 195.
  73. ^ Miller 1978, p. 196.
  74. ^ Troost 2001, p. 196.
  75. ^ Childs 1984, p. 61.
  76. ^ Holmes 2009, p. 136.
  77. ^ Troost 2005, pp. 195–196.
  78. ^ Miller 1973, pp. 671–672.
  79. ^ a b Harris 2006, p. 285.
  80. ^ Davies 2004.
  81. ^ Burchett 1703, pp. 14–17.
  82. ^ a b Rodger 2004, p. 138.
  83. ^ Prud'homme van Reine 2009, p. 291.
  84. ^ Miller 1973, p. 679.
  85. ^ Western 1972, p. 259.
  86. ^ Jardine 2008, p. 29; Williams 1960, pp. 10–16.
  87. ^ Speck 1989, p. 74.
  88. ^ a b Speck 1989, pp. 74–75.
  89. ^ Troost 2001, p. 199.
  90. ^ a b c d Rodger 2004, p. 137.
  91. ^ Jones 1973, pp. 201–221.
  92. ^ Prud'homme van Reine 2009, p. 288.
  93. ^ Jardine 2008, pp. 10–11.
  94. ^ Bander 2014, p. 276.
  95. ^ a b c Van Nimwegen 2020, p. 183-185.
  96. ^ a b Prud'homme van Reine 2009, p. 289.
  97. ^ Western 1972, p. 260.
  98. ^ a b Prud'homme van Reine 2009, pp. 290–291.
  99. ^ Harris 2006, p. 203.
  100. ^ Rodger 2004, p. 139.
  101. ^ Miller 1978, p. 199.
  102. ^ Rodger 2004, pp. 137–139.
  103. ^ Childs 1980, pp. 175.
  104. ^ Sowerby 2013, pp. 347–348.
  105. ^ Harris 2006, p. 283.
  106. ^ a b Miller 1978, p. 204.
  107. ^ Jardine 2008, p. 16.
  108. ^ Jardine 2008, pp. 15–16.
  109. ^ Jardine 2008, pp. 31–32.
  110. ^ Miller 1978, pp. 201–202.
  111. ^ Harris 2006, p. 284.
  112. ^ Miller 1978, p. 205.
  113. ^ a b Jardine 2008, p. 17.
  114. ^ Harris 2006, pp. 296–300.
  115. ^ The London Gazette 1688, p. 2.
  116. ^ Miller 1978, p. 208.
  117. ^ Jardine 2008, p. 19.
  118. ^ Huygens 1881, p. 62.
  119. ^ Harris 2006, p. 319.
  120. ^ Harris 2006, p. 325.
  121. ^ Miller 1978, p. 209.
  122. ^ Harris 2006, p. 329.
  123. ^ Pincus 2009, pp. 292–293.
  124. ^ Harris 2006, p. 341.
  125. ^ a b Maer & Gay 2008, p. 4.
  126. ^ Harris 2006, p. 165.
  127. ^ Harris 2006, pp. 379–381.
  128. ^ Szechi 1994, pp. 30–31.
  129. ^ Szechi & Sankey 2001, p. 97.
  130. ^ University of St. Andrews.
  131. ^ Coward 1980, p. 460.
  132. ^ Troost 2005.
  133. ^ Israel 1989, p. 37-38.
  134. ^ Van Nimwegen 2020, p. [page needed].
  135. ^ a b Vries & Woude 1997, pp. 673–687.
  136. ^ Hertzler 1987.
  137. ^ Pincus 2009, p. 5.
  138. ^ Goodlad 2007; De Krey 2008, pp. 738–773.
  139. ^ Vallance 2007
  140. ^ Taylor 1994, p. 466.
  141. ^ Jardine 2008, p. 27.
  142. ^ Schwoerer 1977.
  143. ^ Pincus 2009.
  144. ^ a b Pincus 2009, pp. ?.
  145. ^ Wennerlind 2011, p. 109.
  146. ^ Pincus 2009, pp. 369–370.
  147. ^ Lynch 1992, p. 302.
  148. ^ Bradley 2007, p. 28.
  149. ^ Windeyer 1938.
  150. ^ Webb 1995, p. 166.
  151. ^ Engels 1997, p. 269.
  152. ^ Mitchell 2009, pp. xvi, xviii, xix.
  153. ^ Mason & Smith 2004.
  154. ^ De Jure Regni apud Scotos 2015.
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  156. ^ Israel 2003, pp. 20.
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Further reading

  • Ashley, Maurice (1966). The Glorious Revolution of 1688. Hodder & Stoughton.
  • Cruickshanks, Eveline (2000). The Glorious Revolution (British History in Perspective). Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-23009-8. OL 9818099M.
  • DeKrey, Gary S. (2007). Restoration and Revolution in Britain: A Political History of the Era of Charles II and the Glorious Revolution. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-65103-2.
  • Glassey, Lionel K. J., ed. (1997). The Reigns of Charles II and James VII and II. ISBN 978-0-333-62500-2.
  • Hamowy, Ronald (2008). "Glorious Revolution". The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE; Cato Institute. pp. 208–211. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n125. ISBN 978-1-4129-6580-4. LCCN 2008009151. OCLC 750831024.
  • MacCubbin, R. P.; Hamilton-Phillips, M., eds. (1988). The Age of William III and Mary II: Power, Politics and Patronage, 1688–1702. College of William and Mary in Virginia. ISBN 978-0-9622081-0-2.
  • McCaffrey, Carmel (2006). In Search of Ireland's Heroes. Ivan R Dee. ISBN 978-1-56663-615-5. OL 8670276M.
  • Miller, John (1997). The Glorious Revolution (2 ed.). ISBN 978-0-582-29222-2.
  • Ogg, David (1956). William III. ISBN 978-0-758-18954-7. OL 13525080M.
  • Onnekink, David (2007). The Anglo-Dutch Favourite: The Career of Hans Willem Bentinck, 1st Earl of Portland (1649–1709). Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7546-5545-9.
  • Pincus, Steven C. A. (2005). England's Glorious Revolution 1688–1689: A Brief History with Documents. Bedford/St. Martin's. ISBN 978-0-312-16714-1. OL 24936969M.
  • Prall, Stuart (1972). The Bloodless Revolution: England, 1688. Anchor Books. OCLC 644932859.
  • Vallance, Edward (2006). The Glorious Revolution: 1688 – Britain's Fight for Liberty. Brown Little. ISBN 978-1-933648-24-8.

External links

  • Weiss, B. (2014). "Medals of the Glorious Revolution: The Influence of Catholic-Protestant Antagonism" (PDF). ANS Magazine. Vol. 13, no. 1. New York: American Numismatic Society. pp. 6–23. (PDF) from the original on 19 December 2014.
  • Glorious Revolution on In Our Time at the BBC
  • "Charles II (1630–1685)". BBC History. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  • "English Revolution of 1688". Catholic Encyclopedia.
  • The Civil War team, presented by Tristram Hunt (7 January 2001). "Aftershocks – The Glorious Revolution". open2.net (BBC & Open University).
  • Quinn, Stephen (17 April 2003). "The Glorious Revolution of 1688". In Whaples, Robert (ed.). EH.Net Encyclopedia.
  • Royal Household at Buckingham Palace, ed. (2008–2009). "History of the Monarchy >United Kingdom Monarchs (1603–present) >The Stuarts >Mary II, William III and The Act of Settlement > William III (r. 1689–1702) and Mary II (r. 1689–1694)". Official web site of the British Monarchy.
  • Wilkes, Donald E. Jr.; Kramer, Matthew. "The Glorious Revolution of 1688". Retrieved 15 August 2010.

glorious, revolution, bloodless, revolution, redirects, here, book, vegetarian, history, bloodless, revolution, book, this, article, about, english, revolution, 1688, scotland, revolution, 1868, spain, spain, other, uses, disambiguation, known, glorieuze, over. The Bloodless Revolution redirects here For the book on vegetarian history see The Bloodless Revolution book This article is about the English revolution of 1688 and the Glorious Revolution in Scotland For the revolution of 1868 in Spain see Glorious Revolution Spain For other uses see Glorious Revolution disambiguation The Glorious Revolution a known as the Glorieuze Overtocht or Glorious Crossing in the Netherlands is the sequence of events leading to the deposition of King James II and VII of England Ireland and Scotland in November 1688 and his replacement by his daughter Mary II and her husband and James s nephew William III of Orange de facto ruler of the Dutch Republic A term first used by John Hampden in late 1689 it has been notable in the years since for having been described as the last successful invasion of England as well as an internal coup with differing interpretations from the Dutch and English perspectives respectively 1 2 Glorious RevolutionPart of the Nine Years WarThe Prince of Orange landing at Torbay by Jan Hoynck van PapendrechtDate1688 1689LocationBritish IslesParticipantsBritish and Dutch military forcesBritish and Irish societyOutcomeReplacement of James II by William III of England and Mary II of England Jacobite rising of 1689 Williamite War in Ireland Nine Years War with France England and Scotland join Grand Alliance Drafting of the Bill of Rights 1689Despite his personal Catholicism a religious denomination opposed by the Protestant majority in England and Scotland James became king in February 1685 with widespread support in both countries since many feared that his exclusion would lead to a repetition of the 1639 1653 Wars of the Three Kingdoms 3 It was also considered a short term issue since James was 52 his second marriage remained childless after 11 years and the heir presumptive was his Protestant elder daughter Mary He alienated his supporters by suspending the Scottish and English parliaments in 1685 and ruling by personal decree over the next three years 4 These concerns were insufficient to spark a revolution until two events in June 1688 turned dissent into a political crisis The first on 10 June was the birth of a male heir James Francis Edward who displaced Mary and for the first time created the prospect of a Catholic dynasty The second was the decision to prosecute seven bishops for seditious libel which many saw as the culmination of a series of attacks on the Church of England Their acquittal on 30 June sparked anti Catholic riots in England and Scotland and destroyed James s political authority since his continued presence appeared a greater threat to stability than his removal A broad coalition of English politicians soldiers and religious leaders now invited William to intervene militarily and protect the Protestant religion With Louis XIV of France preparing to attack the Dutch William viewed this as an opportunity to secure English resources for what became the Nine Years War which began in September 1688 On 5 November he landed in Brixham in Devon with 20 000 men and advanced on London engaging Jacobite troops loyal to James at Wincanton and Reading Following the defection of Edward Hyde and John Churchill and other senior Protestant military officers most of the 30 000 strong British Army mobilised in southern England disintegrated Attempts at negotiation between James and William broke down and on 23 December James fled the capital and went into exile In April 1689 Parliament made William and Mary joint monarchs of England and Ireland A separate but similar Scottish settlement was made in June While the Revolution itself was quick and relatively bloodless pro Stuart revolts in Scotland and Ireland caused significant casualties 5 Although Jacobitism persisted into the late 18th century the Revolution ended a century of political dispute by confirming the primacy of Parliament over the Crown a principle established in the Bill of Rights 1689 6 The Toleration Act 1688 granted freedom of worship to nonconformist Protestants but restrictions on Catholics contained in the 1678 and 1681 English and Scottish Test Acts remained in force until 1828 Religious prohibitions on the monarch s choice of spouse were removed in 2015 but those applying to the monarch themselves remain Contents 1 Background 1 1 The political background in England 1 2 Timeline of events 1686 to 1688 2 Dutch intervention 2 1 Prelude 1685 to June 1688 2 2 Invitation to William 3 Dutch preparations July to September 1688 4 Decision to invade 5 English defensive strategy 6 Invasion 6 1 Embarkation of the army and the Declaration of The Hague 6 2 Crossing and landing 7 The collapse of James s rule 8 The revolutionary settlement 8 1 Scotland and Ireland 9 Anglo Dutch alliance 9 1 The decline of the Dutch Republic 10 Assessment and historiography 10 1 Impact 11 Footnotes 12 Citations 13 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksBackground EditDespite his Catholicism James became king in 1685 with widespread support as demonstrated by the rapid defeat of the Argyll and Monmouth Rebellions less than four years later he was forced into exile 7 Often seen as an exclusively English event modern historians argue James failed to appreciate the extent to which Royal power relied at the local level on the landed gentry and the loss of that support fatally damaged his regime The vast majority of the gentry in England and Scotland were Protestant while even in largely Catholic Ireland a disproportionate number were members of the Protestant Church of Ireland Although willing to accept James personal religious beliefs his backers did so only so long as he maintained the primacy of the Protestant Church of England and Church of Scotland When his policies appeared to undermine the existing political and religious order the result was to alienate his English and Scottish supporters and destabilise Ireland 8 James II amp VII King of England Scotland and Ireland by Godfrey Kneller National Portrait Gallery London Stuart political ideology derived from James VI and I who in 1603 had created a vision of a centralised state run by a monarch whose authority came from God and where the function of Parliament was simply to obey 9 Disputes over the relationship between king and Parliament led to the War of the Three Kingdoms and continued after the 1660 Stuart Restoration Charles II came to rely on the Royal Prerogative since measures passed in this way could be withdrawn when he decided rather than Parliament However it could not be used for major legislation or taxation 10 Concern that James intended to create an absolute monarchy led to the 1679 to 1681 Exclusion Crisis dividing the English political class into those who wanted to exclude him from the throne mostly Whigs and their opponents mostly Tories However in 1685 many Whigs feared the consequences of bypassing the natural heir while Tories were often strongly anti Catholic and their support assumed the continued primacy of the Church of England Most importantly it was seen as a short term issue James was 52 his marriage to Mary of Modena remained childless after 11 years and the heirs were his Protestant daughters Mary and Anne 11 There was much greater sympathy in Scotland for a Stuart heir and the 1681 Succession Act confirmed the duty of all to support him regardless of religion 12 Over 95 percent of Scots belonged to the national church or kirk even other Protestant sects were banned and by 1680 Catholics were a tiny minority confined to parts of the aristocracy and the remote Highlands 13 Episcopalians had regained control of the kirk in 1660 leading to a series of Presbyterian uprisings but memories of the bitter religious conflicts of the Civil War period meant the majority preferred stability 14 In England and Scotland most of those who backed James in 1685 wanted to retain existing political and religious arrangements but this was not the case in Ireland While he was guaranteed support from the Catholic majority James was also popular among Irish Protestants since the Church of Ireland depended on Royal support for its survival while Ulster was dominated by Presbyterians who supported his tolerance policies However religion was only one factor of equal concern for Catholics were laws barring them from serving in the military or holding public office and land reform In 1600 90 of Irish land was owned by Catholics but following a series of confiscation during the 17th century this had dropped to 22 in 1685 Catholic and Protestant merchants in Dublin and elsewhere objected to commercial restrictions placing them at a disadvantage to their English competitors 15 The political background in England Edit James s attempts to allow tolerance for English Catholics coincided with the October 1685 Edict of Fontainebleau revoking it for Huguenots While James s supporters viewed hereditary succession as more important than his personal Catholicism they opposed his policies of Tolerance under which Catholics would be allowed to hold public office and engage in public life Opposition was led by devout Anglicans 16 who argued that the measures he proposed were incompatible with the oath he had sworn as king to uphold the supremacy of the Church of England In an age when oaths were seen as fundamental to a stable society by demanding that Parliament approve his measures James was seen not only to be breaking his own word but requiring others to do the same Parliament refused to comply despite being the most Loyal Parliament a Stuart ever had 17 Although historians generally accept James wished to promote Catholicism not establish an Absolute monarchy his stubborn and inflexible reaction to opposition had the same result When the English and Scottish Parliaments refused to repeal the 1678 and 1681 Test Acts he suspended them in November 1685 and ruled by decree Attempts to form a King s party of Catholics English Dissenters and dissident Scottish Presbyterians was politically short sighted since it rewarded those who joined the 1685 rebellions and undermined his supporters 18 Demanding tolerance for Catholics was also badly timed In October 1685 Louis XIV of France issued the Edict of Fontainebleau revoking the 1598 Edict of Nantes which had given French Protestants the right to practise their religion over the next four years an estimated 200 000 to 400 000 went into exile 40 000 of whom settled in London 19 Combined with Louis expansionist policies and the killing of 2 000 Vaudois Protestants in 1686 it led to fears Protestant Europe was threatened by a Catholic counter reformation 20 These concerns were reinforced by events in Ireland the Lord Deputy the Earl of Tyrconnell wanted to create a Catholic establishment able to survive James s death which meant replacing Protestant officials at a pace that was inherently destabilising 21 Timeline of events 1686 to 1688 Edit The Seven Bishops prosecuted for seditious libel in 1688 The majority of those who backed James in 1685 did so because they wanted stability and the rule of law qualities frequently undermined by his actions After suspending Parliament in November 1685 he sought to rule by decree although the principle was not disputed the widening of its scope caused considerable concern particularly when judges who disagreed with its application were dismissed 22 He then alienated many by perceived attacks on the established church Henry Compton Bishop of London was suspended for refusing to ban John Sharp from preaching after he gave an anti Catholic sermon 23 He often made things worse by political clumsiness to general fury the Ecclesiastical Commission of 1686 established to discipline the Church of England included suspected Catholics like the Earl of Huntingdon 24 This was combined with an inability to accept opposition in April 1687 he ordered Magdalen College Oxford to elect a Catholic sympathiser named Anthony Farmer as president but as he was ineligible under the college statutes the fellows elected John Hough instead Both Farmer and Hough withdrew in favour of another candidate selected by James who then demanded the fellows personally apologise on their knees for defying him when they refused they were replaced by Catholics 25 Attempts to create an alternative Kings Party were never likely to succeed for English Catholics were only 1 1 of the population and Nonconformists 4 4 26 Both groups were divided since private worship was generally tolerated Catholic moderates feared greater visibility would provoke a backlash Among Nonconformists while Quakers and Congregationalists supported repeal of the Test Acts the majority wanted to amend the 1662 Act of Uniformity and be allowed back into the Church of England 27 When James ensured the election of the Presbyterian John Shorter as Lord Mayor of London in 1687 he insisted on complying with the Test Act reportedly because of a distrust of the King s favour thus encouraging that which His Majesties whole Endeavours were intended to disannull 28 James Francis Edward Stuart circa 1703 His birth created the possibility of a Catholic dynasty To ensure a compliant Parliament James required potential MPs to be approved by their local Lord Lieutenant eligibility for both offices required positive answers in writing to the Three Questions one being a commitment to repeal of the Test Act 29 In addition local government and town corporations were purged to create an obedient electoral machine further alienating the county gentry who had formed the majority of those who backed James in 1685 30 On 24 August 1688 writs were issued for a general election 31 The expansion of the military caused great concern particularly in England and Scotland where memories of the Civil War left huge resistance to standing armies 32 In Ireland Talbot replaced Protestant officers with Catholics James did the same in England while basing the troops at Hounslow appeared a deliberate attempt to overawe Parliament 33 In April 1688 he ordered his Declaration of Indulgence read in every church when the Archbishop of Canterbury and six other bishops refused they were charged with seditious libel and confined in the Tower of London Two events turned dissent into a crisis the birth of James Francis Edward Stuart on 10 June created the prospect of a Catholic dynasty while the acquittal of the Seven Bishops on 30 June destroyed James s political authority 34 Dutch intervention EditPrelude 1685 to June 1688 Edit French Huguenot refugees Their expulsion in 1685 was one in a series of events that created a sense that Protestant Europe was under threat In 1677 James s elder daughter and heir Mary married her Protestant cousin William of Orange stadtholder of the main provinces of the Dutch Republic The two initially shared common objectives in wanting Mary to succeed her father while French ambitions in the Spanish Netherlands threatened both English and Dutch trade 35 Although William sent James troops to help suppress the 1685 Monmouth Rebellion their relationship deteriorated thereafter 36 The Franco Dutch War continued French expansion and expulsion of the Huguenots meant William assumed another war was inevitable and although the States General of the Netherlands preferred peace the majority accepted he was correct This view was widely shared throughout Protestant Europe in October 1685 Frederick William Elector of Brandenburg renounced his French alliance for one with the Dutch In July 1686 other Protestant states formed the anti French League of Augsburg with Dutch support securing or neutralising English resources especially the Royal Navy now became key to both sides 37 William III King of England Scotland and Ireland stadtholder of Guelders Holland Zealand Utrecht and Overijssel School of Willem Wissing after Peter Lely Following a skirmish between French and Dutch naval vessels in July 1686 William concluded English neutrality was not enough and he needed their active support in the event of war 38 His relationship with James was affected by the fact both men relied on advisors with relatively limited views in William s case mainly English and Scots Presbyterian exiles the latter with close links to the Protestant minority in Ireland who saw Tyrconnell s policies as a threat to their existence Having largely alienated his Tory support base James depended on a small circle of Catholic converts like Sunderland Melfort and Perth 39 Suspicions increased when James sought William s backing for repealing the Test Acts he predictably refused further damaging their relationship 40 Having previously assumed he was guaranteed English support in a war with France William now worried he might face an Anglo French alliance despite assurances by James he had no intention of doing so Historians argue these assurances were genuine but James did not appreciate the distrust caused by his domestic policies 41 In August 1687 William s cousin de Zuylestein travelled to England with condolences on the death of Mary of Modena s mother allowing him to make contact with the political opposition Throughout 1688 his English supporters provided William detailed information on public opinion and developments very little of which was intercepted 42 In October 1687 after fourteen years of marriage and multiple miscarriages it was announced the Queen was pregnant Melfort immediately declaring it was a boy When James then wrote to Mary urging her to convert to Catholicism it convinced many he was seeking a Catholic heir one way or the other and may have been a deciding factor in whether to invade 43 Early in 1688 a pamphlet circulated in England written by Dutch Grand Pensionary Gaspar Fagel this guaranteed William s support for freedom of worship for Dissenters and retaining the Test Acts unlike James who offered tolerance in return for repeal 44 45 In April 1688 Louis XIV announced tariffs on Dutch herring imports along with plans to support the Royal Navy in the English Channel James immediately denied making any such request but fearing it was the prelude to a formal alliance the Dutch began preparing a military intervention 46 On the pretext of needing additional resources to deal with French privateers in July the States General authorised an additional 9 000 sailors and 21 new warships 47 Invitation to William Edit Main article Invitation to William English support was vital for a successful invasion and at the end of April William met with Edward Russell who was acting as unofficial envoy for the Whig opposition In a conversation recorded by the exiled Gilbert Burnet he asked for a formal invitation from key leaders asking him to rescue the nation and the religion with a projected date of end September 48 William later claimed he was forced to take control of the conspiracy when Russell warned him the English would rise against James even without his help and he feared this would lead to a republic depriving his wife of her inheritance 49 This version is disputed but in June he sent Zuylestein to England once again ostensibly to congratulate James on his new son in reality to co ordinate with his supporters 50 Henry Sydney who drafted the Invitation to William The birth of the Prince of Wales and prospect of a Catholic successor ended the wait for better times policy advocated by those like Halifax This led to the production of the Invitation to William signed by seven representatives from the key constituencies whose support William needed in order to commit to an invasion They included the land magnates Danby and Devonshire one a Whig one a Tory Henry Compton Bishop of London for the church Shrewsbury and Lumley the army and finally Russell and Sydney for the navy 51 We have great reason to believe we shall be every day in a worse condition than we are and less able to defend ourselves and therefore we do earnestly wish we might be so happy as to find a remedy before it be too late for us to contribute to our own deliverance the people are so generally dissatisfied with the present conduct of the government in relation to their religion liberties and properties all which have been greatly invaded and they are in such expectation of their prospects being daily worse that your Highness may be assured there are nineteen parts of twenty of the people throughout the kingdom who are desirous of a change and who we believe would willingly contribute to it if they had such a protection to countenance their rising as would secure them from being destroyed invitation by The Seven 52 Intended for public consumption the Invitation was drafted by Sidney later described as the great wheel on which the Revolution rolled 42 It claimed nineteen parts of twenty throughout the kingdom desired a change that much the greatest part of the nobility and gentry were dissatisfied that the army was divided while very many of the common soldiers do daily shew such an aversion to the Popish religion that there is the greatest probability imaginable of great numbers of deserters and amongst the seamen there is not one in ten who would do them any service in such a war They promised to rally to William upon his landing in England and to do all that lies in our power to prepare others to be in as much readiness as such an action is capable of finally they stressed the importance of acting quickly 53 On 30 June the same day the bishops were acquitted the Invitation was carried to The Hague by Rear Admiral Herbert disguised as a common sailor Meanwhile William s confidante Willem Bentinck launched a propaganda campaign in England in numerous pamphlets William was presented as a true Stuart but unlike James and his brother Charles one free from the vices of crypto Catholicism absolutism and debauchery Much of the spontaneous support for William on his landing was organised by Bentinck and his agents 54 Dutch preparations July to September 1688 Edit The Dutch were concerned by their vulnerable eastern border In 1672 an alliance with the Electorate of Cologne allowed France to nearly over run the Republic William s key strategic purpose was creating a defensive coalition that would block further French expansion in Europe an objective not shared by the majority of his English supporters In 1672 an alliance with the Electorate of Cologne had enabled France to bypass Dutch forward defences and nearly over run the Republic so ensuring an anti French ruler was vital to prevent a repetition As an ecclesiastical principality of the Holy Roman Empire Cologne s ruler was nominated by Pope Innocent XI in conjunction with Emperor Leopold I 55 Both Louis and James were in dispute with Innocent over the right to appoint Catholic bishops and clergy when the old Elector died in June 1688 Innocent and Leopold ignored the French candidate in favour of Joseph Clemens of Bavaria 56 After 1678 France continued its expansion into the Rhineland including the 1683 to 1684 War of the Reunions additional territorial demands in the Palatinate and construction of forts at Landau and Traben Trarbach 57 This presented an existential threat to Habsburg dominance guaranteeing Leopold s support for the Dutch and negating French attempts to build German alliances 58 William s envoy Johann von Gortz assured Leopold English Catholics would not be persecuted and intervention was to elect a free Parliament not depose James a convenient fiction that allowed him to remain neutral 59 Although his English supporters considered a token force sufficient William assembled 260 transport ships and 15 000 men nearly half the 30 000 strong Dutch States Army With France on the verge of war their absence was of great concern to the States General and Bentinck hired 13 616 German mercenaries to man Dutch border fortresses freeing elite units like the Scots Brigade for use in England 60 The increase could be presented as a limited precaution against French aggression as the Dutch would typically double or triple their army strength in wartime b William instructed his experienced deputy Schomberg to prepare for a campaign in Germany 62 Decision to invade Edit A Dutch herring fleet French tariffs on this lucrative trade helped William build domestic support for military intervention At the beginning of September an invasion remained in the balance with the States General fearing a French attack via Flanders while their army was in England However the surrender of Belgrade on 6 September seemed to presage an Ottoman collapse and release Austrian resources for use in Germany Hoping to act before Leopold could respond and relieve pressure on the Ottomans Louis attacked Philippsburg With France now committed in Germany this greatly reduced the threat to the Dutch 63 Instead Louis attempted to intimidate the States General and on 9 September his envoy D Avaux handed them two letters The first warned an attack on James meant war with France the second any interference with French operations in Germany would end with the destruction of the Dutch state 64 Both misfired convinced Louis was trying to drag him into war James told the Dutch there was no secret Anglo French alliance against them although his denials only increased their suspicions By confirming France s primary objective was the Rhineland the second allowed William to move troops from the eastern border to the coast even though most of the new mercenaries had yet to arrive 65 On 22 September the French seized over 100 Dutch ships many owned by Amsterdam merchants in response on 26 September the Amsterdam City Council agreed to back William 66 This was a significant decision since the Council dominated the States of Holland the most powerful political body in the Dutch Republic which contributed nearly 60 of its budget French troops entered the Rhineland on 27 September and in a secret session held on 29th William argued for a pre emptive strike as Louis and James would attempt to bring this state to its ultimate ruin and subjugation as soon as they find the occasion This was accepted by the States with the objective left deliberately vague other than making the English King and Nation live in a good relation and useful to their friends and allies and especially to this State 67 Following their approval the Amsterdam financial market raised a loan of four million guilders in only three days with further financing coming from various sources including two million guilders from the banker Francisco Lopes Suasso 68 c The biggest concern for Holland was the potential impact on the Dutch economy and politics of William becoming ruler of England the claim he had no intention of removing the King from the throne was not believed These fears were arguably justified William s access to English resources permanently diminished Amsterdam s power within the Republic and its status as the world s leading commercial and financial centre 70 English defensive strategy Edit Admiral Dartmouth who spent more time on monitoring his disaffected captains than operational planning Neither James nor Sunderland trusted Louis correctly suspecting that his support would continue only so long as it coincided with French interests while Mary of Modena claimed his warnings were simply an attempt to drag England into an unwanted alliance 71 As a former naval commander James appreciated the difficulties of a successful invasion even in good weather and as they moved into autumn the likelihood seemed to diminish With the Dutch on the verge of war with France he did not believe the States General would allow William to make the attempt if they did his army and navy were strong enough to defeat it 72 Reasonable in theory his reliance on the loyalty and efficiency of the military proved deeply flawed Both the army and the navy remained overwhelmingly Protestant and anti Catholic in July only personal intervention by James prevented a naval mutiny when a Catholic captain held Mass on his ship The transfer of 2 500 Catholics from the Royal Irish Army to England in September led to clashes with Protestant troops some of his most reliable units refused to obey orders and many of their officers resigned 73 When James demanded the repatriation of all six regiments of the Scots Brigade in January 1688 74 William refused but used the opportunity to purge those considered unreliable a total of 104 officers and 44 soldiers 75 Some may have been Williamite agents such as Colonel Belasyse a Protestant with over 15 years of service who returned to his family estates in Yorkshire and made contact with Danby The promotion of Catholic former Brigade officers like Thomas Buchan and Alexander Cannon to command positions led to the formation of the Association of Protestant Officers which included senior veterans like Charles Trelawny Churchill and Percy Kirke 76 On 14 August Churchill offered their support to William helping convince him it was safe to risk an invasion although James was aware of the conspiracy he took no action 77 One reason may have been fears over the impact on the army with a notional strength of 34 000 it looked impressive on paper but morale was brittle while many were untrained or lacked weapons It also had to fill policing roles previously delegated to the militia which had been deliberately allowed to decay most of the 4 000 regular troops brought from Scotland in October had to be stationed in London to keep order In October attempts were made to restore the militia but many members were reportedly so angry at the changes made to local corporations James was advised it was better not to raise them 78 Lord Danby one of the Immortal Seven and William s agent in Northern England Widespread discontent and growing hostility to the Stuart regime was particularly apparent in North East and South West England the two landing places identified by William A Tory whose brother Jonathan was one of the Seven Bishops Trelawny s commitment confirmed support from a powerful and well connected West Country bloc allowing access to the ports of Plymouth and Torbay In the north a force organised by Belasyse and Danby prepared to seize York its most important city and Hull its largest port 79 Herbert had been replaced by Dartmouth as commander of the fleet when he defected in June but many captains owed him their appointments and were of doubtful loyalty Dartmouth suspected Berkeley and Grafton of plotting to overthrow him to monitor them he placed their ships next to his and minimised contact between the other vessels to prevent conspiracy 80 Lack of funds meant exclusive of fireships and light scouting vessels only 16 warships available in early October all third rates or fourth rates short of both men and supplies 81 While The Downs was the best place to intercept a cross Channel attack it was also vulnerable to a surprise assault even for ships fully manned and adequately provisioned Instead James placed his ships in a strong defensive position near Chatham Dockyard believing the Dutch would seek to establish naval superiority before committing to a landing 82 While this had been the original plan winter storms meant conditions deteriorated rapidly for those on the transports William therefore decided to sail in convoy and avoid battle 83 The easterly winds that allowed the Dutch to cross prevented the Royal Navy leaving the Thames estuary and intervening 82 The English fleet was outnumbered 2 1 undermanned short of supplies and in the wrong place Key landing locations in the South West and Yorkshire had been secured by sympathisers while both army and navy were led by officers whose loyalty was questionable Even early in 1686 foreign observers doubted the military would fight for James against a Protestant heir and William claimed only to be securing the inheritance of his wife Mary While still a dangerous undertaking the invasion was less risky than it seemed 84 Invasion EditEmbarkation of the army and the Declaration of The Hague Edit Equestrian portrait of William III by Jan Wyck commemorating the landing at Brixham Torbay 5 November 1688 The Dutch preparations though carried out with great speed could not remain secret The English envoy Ignatius White the Marquess d Albeville warned his country an absolute conquest is intended under the specious and ordinary pretences of religion liberty property and a free Parliament Louis threatened an immediate declaration of war if William proceeded and sent James 300 000 livres 85 Embarkations begun on 22 September Gregorian calendar had been completed on 8 October and the expedition was that day openly approved by the States of Holland the same day James issued a proclamation to the English nation that it should prepare for a Dutch invasion to ward off conquest On 30 September 10 October Julian Gregorian calendars William issued the Declaration of The Hague actually written by Fagel of which 60 000 copies of the English translation by Gilbert Burnet were distributed after the landing in England 86 in which he assured that his only aim was to maintain the Protestant religion install a free parliament and investigate the legitimacy of the Prince of Wales He would respect the position of James William declared It is both certain and evident to all men that the public peace and happiness of any state or kingdom cannot be preserved where the Laws Liberties and Customs established by the lawful authority in it are openly transgressed and annulled more especially where the alteration of Religion is endeavoured and that a religion which is contrary to law is endeavoured to be introduced upon which those who are most immediately concerned in it are indispensably bound to endeavour to preserve and maintain the established Laws Liberties and customs and above all the Religion and Worship of God that is established among them and to take such an effectual care that the inhabitants of the said state or kingdom may neither be deprived of their Religion nor of their Civil Rights William of Orange 87 William went on to condemn James s advisers for overturning the religion laws and liberties of England Scotland and Ireland by the use of the suspending and dispensing power the establishment of the manifestly illegal commission for ecclesiastical causes and its use to suspend the Bishop of London and to remove the Fellows of Magdalen College Oxford William also condemned James s attempt to repeal the Test Acts and the penal laws through pressuring individuals and waging an assault on parliamentary boroughs as well as his purging of the judiciary James s attempt to pack Parliament was in danger of removing the last and great remedy for all those evils 88 Therefore William continued we have thought fit to go over to England and to carry over with us a force sufficient by the blessing of God to defend us from the violence of those evil Counsellors this our Expedition is intended for no other design but to have a free and lawful Parliament assembled as soon as is possible 88 On 4 14 October William responded to the allegations by James in a second declaration denying any intention to become king or to conquer England a claim which remains controversial 89 The swiftness of the embarkations surprised all foreign observers Louis had in fact delayed his threats against the Dutch until early September because he assumed it then would be too late in the season to set the expedition in motion anyway if their reaction proved negative typically such an enterprise would take at least some months 90 Being ready after the last week of September first week of October would normally have meant that the Dutch could have profited from the last spell of good weather as the autumn storms tend to begin in the third week of that month However this year they came early For three weeks the invasion fleet was prevented by adverse south westerly gales from departing from the naval port of Hellevoetsluis and Catholics all over the Netherlands and the British kingdoms held prayer sessions that this popish wind might endure However on 14 24 October it became the famous Protestant Wind by turning to the east 91 Crossing and landing Edit William boarding Den Briel Although most of the warships were provided by the Admiralty of Amsterdam the expedition was officially treated as a private affair with the States General allowing William use of the Dutch army and fleet 58 For propaganda purposes English admiral Arthur Herbert was nominally in command but in reality operational control remained with Lieutenant Admiral Cornelis Evertsen the Youngest and Vice Admiral Philips van Almonde 92 Accompanied by Willem Bastiaensz Schepers the Rotterdam shipping magnate who provided financing William boarded the frigate Den Briel on 16 26 October d 93 94 Roughly twice the size of the Spanish Armada 90 the fleet included 49 warships 76 transports for the soldiers 120 for the 5 000 horses required by the cavalry and supply train and 40 000 men on board of which 9 500 were sailors of the Dutch navy 95 96 e Having departed on 19 29 October the expedition was halfway across the North Sea when it was scattered by a gale forcing the Brill back to Hellevoetsluis on 21 31 October William refused to go ashore and the fleet reassembled having lost only one ship but nearly a thousand horses press reports deliberately exaggerated the damage and claimed the expedition might be postponed until next spring 98 Dartmouth and his senior commanders considered taking advantage of this by blockading Hellevoetsluis then decided against it partly because the stormy weather made it dangerous but also because they could not rely on their men 99 William replaced his losses and departed when the wind changed on 1 11 November this time heading for Harwich where Bentinck had prepared a landing site It has been suggested this was a feint to divert some of Dartmouth s ships north which proved to be the case and when the wind shifted again the Dutch armada sailed south into the Strait of Dover 98 In doing so they twice passed the English fleet which was unable to intercept because of the adverse winds and tides 100 William landed at Torbay whose sheltered position makes the weather unusually moderate note non native cabbage trees On 3 13 November the invasion fleet entered the English Channel in an enormous formation 25 ships deep the troops lined up on deck firing musket volleys colours flying and military bands playing Intended to awe observers with its size and power Rapin de Thoyras later described it as the most magnificent and affecting spectacle ever seen by human eyes The same wind blowing the Dutch down the Channel kept Dartmouth confined in the Thames estuary by the time he was able to make his way out he was too far behind to stop William reaching Torbay on 5 November 101 As anticipated the French fleet remained in the Mediterranean in order to support an attack on the Papal States if needed 90 while a south westerly gale now forced Dartmouth to shelter in Portsmouth harbour and kept him there for two days allowing William to complete his disembarkation undisturbed 102 His army totalled around 14 000 15 000 f 90 95 consisting of around 11 000 infantry including nearly 5 000 members of the elite Anglo Scots Brigade and Dutch Blue Guards 3 660 cavalry and an artillery train of twenty one 24 pounder cannon 103 104 Some 5 000 volunteers consisting of British exiles and Huguenots also accompanied the fleet William brought them along to accelerate English army reforms because they could replace the soldiers who were loyal to James 95 William brought weapons to equip another 20 000 men although the subsequent and rapid collapse of James army meant the 12 000 local volunteers who joined by 20 November were eventually dismissed 105 The collapse of James s rule Edit Salisbury Faversham London Torbay Wincanton Exeter Portsmouth Hungerford Reading Plymouthclass notpageimage Key locations in November 1688 Panicked by the prospect of invasion James met with the bishops on 28 September offering concessions five days later they presented demands which included restoring the religious position to that prevailing in February 1685 along with free elections for a new Parliament Although they hoped this would allow James to remain king in reality there was little chance of this since at a minimum he would have to disinherit his son enforce the Test Acts and accept the supremacy of Parliament all of which were unacceptable In addition by now his Whig opponents did not trust him to keep his promises while Tories like Danby were too committed to William to escape punishment 106 Although his veteran force had the capability of defeating the largely untested recruits of the Royal Army William and his English supporters preferred to avoid bloodshed and allow the regime to collapse on its own Landing in Torbay provided space and time for this while heavy rainfall forced a slow advance regardless and to avoid alienating the local population by looting his troops were well supplied and paid three months in advance When he entered Exeter on 9 November in an elaborate procession g he publicly pronounced his objectives were securing the rights of his wife and a free Parliament Despite these precautions there was little enthusiasm for either James or William and the general mood was one of confusion and distrust 108 After Danby had the Declaration publicly read in York on 12 November much of the northern gentry confirmed their backing and the document was widely distributed 109 On 19 November James joined his main force of 19 000 at Salisbury but it soon became apparent his army was not eager to fight and the loyalty of his commanders doubtful Three regiments sent out on 15 November to make contact with William promptly defected while supply problems left the rest short of food and ammunition On 20 November dragoons led by Irish Catholic Patrick Sarsfield clashed with Williamite scouts at Wincanton along with a minor skirmish at Reading on 9 December also featuring Sarsfield these were the only substantial military actions of the campaign After securing his rear by taking Plymouth on 18 November William began his advance on 21 November while Danby and Belasyse captured York and Hull several days later 79 James commander Feversham and other senior officers advised retreat Lacking information on William s movements unable to rely on his own soldiers worn out by lack of sleep and debilitating nose bleeds on 23 November James agreed 110 Next day Churchill Grafton and Princess Anne s husband George deserted to William followed by Anne herself on 26 November The next day James held a meeting at Whitehall Palace with those peers still in London with the exception of Melfort Perth and other Catholics they urged him to issue writs for a Parliamentary election and negotiate with William 111 On 8 December Halifax Nottingham and Godolphin met with William at Hungerford to hear his demands which included the dismissal of Catholics from public office and funding for his army Many viewed these as a reasonable basis for a settlement but James decided to flee the country convinced by Melfort and others that his life was threatened a suggestion generally dismissed by historians William made it clear he would not allow James to be harmed most Tories wanted him to retain his throne while the Whigs simply wanted to drive him out of the country by imposing conditions he would refuse 106 John Churchill circa 1685 A close friend of James and uncle of his illegitimate son Berwick his defection to William was a serious blow The Queen and Prince of Wales left for France on 9 December James following separately on 10 December 112 Accompanied only by Edward Hales and Ralph Sheldon he made his way to Faversham in Kent seeking passage to France first dropping the Great Seal in the River Thames in a last ditch attempt to prevent Parliament being summoned 113 In London his flight and rumours of a Papist invasion led to riots and destruction of Catholic property which quickly spread throughout the country To fill the power vacuum the Earl of Rochester set up a temporary government including members of the Privy Council and City of London authorities but it took them two days to restore order 114 When news arrived James had been captured in Faversham on 11 December by local fishermen Lord Ailesbury one of his personal attendants was sent to escort him back to London On entering the city on 16 December he was welcomed by cheering crowds By making it seem that James remained in control Tory loyalists hoped for a settlement which would leave them in government To create an appearance of normality he heard Mass and presided over a meeting of the Privy Council 115 h James made it clear to the French ambassador Paul Barillon that he still intended to escape to France His few remaining supporters viewed his flight as cowardice and a failure to ensure law and order criminally negligent 116 Happy to help him into exile William recommended he relocate to Ham largely because it was easy to escape from James suggested Rochester instead allegedly because his personal guard was there in reality conveniently positioned for a ship to France On 18 December he left London with a Dutch escort as William entered cheered by the same crowds who greeted his predecessor two days before 117 On 22 December Berwick arrived in Rochester with blank passports allowing them to leave England while his guards were told that if James wanted to leave they should not prevent him but allow him to gently slip through 118 Although Ailesbury and others begged him to stay he left for France on 23 December 113 The revolutionary settlement Edit William III and Mary II reigned jointly until her death in 1694 when William became sole monarch James departure significantly shifted the balance of power in favour of William who took control of the provisional government on 28 December Elections were held in early January for a Convention Parliament which assembled on 22 January The Whigs had a slight majority in the Commons and the Lords was dominated by the Tories but both were led by moderates Archbishop Sancroft and other Stuart loyalists wanted to preserve the line of succession although they recognised keeping James on the throne was no longer possible they preferred Mary either be appointed his regent or sole monarch 119 The next two weeks were spent debating how to resolve this issue much to the annoyance of William who needed a swift resolution the situation in Ireland was rapidly deteriorating while the French had over run large parts of the Rhineland and were preparing to attack the Dutch 120 At a meeting with Danby and Halifax on 3 February he announced his intention to return home if the Convention did not appoint him joint monarch while Mary let it be known she would only rule jointly with her husband Faced with this ultimatum on 6 February Parliament declared that in deserting his people James had abdicated and thus vacated the Crown which was therefore offered jointly to William and Mary 121 Historian Tim Harris argues the most radical act of the 1688 Revolution was breaking the succession and establishing the idea of a contract between ruler and people a fundamental rebuttal of the Stuart ideology of divine right 122 While this was a victory for the Whigs other pieces of legislation were proposed by the Tories often with moderate Whig support designed to protect the Anglican establishment from being undermined by future monarchs including the Calvinist William The Declaration of Right was a tactical compromise setting out where James had failed and establishing the rights of English citizens without agreeing their cause or offering solutions In December 1689 this was incorporated into the Bill of Rights 123 The coronation of William and Mary Charles Rochussen However there were two areas that arguably broke new constitutional ground both responses to what were viewed as specific abuses by James First the Declaration of Right made keeping a standing army without Parliamentary consent illegal overturning the 1661 and 1662 Militia Acts and vesting control of the military in Parliament not the Crown 124 The second was the Coronation Oath Act 1688 the result of James perceived failure to comply with that taken in 1685 it established obligations owed by the monarchy to the people 125 At their coronation on 11 April William and Mary swore to govern the people of this kingdom of England and the dominions thereunto belonging according to the statutes in Parliament agreed on and the laws and customs of the same They were also to maintain the Protestant Reformed faith and preserve inviolable the settlement of the Church of England and its doctrine worship discipline and government as by law established 125 Scotland and Ireland Edit Main articles Glorious Revolution in Scotland and Williamite War in Ireland Parliament House where the Convention of Estates met in March 1689 While Scotland was not involved in the landing by November 1688 only a tiny minority supported James Many of those who accompanied William were Scots exiles including Melville the Argyll his personal chaplain William Carstares and Gilbert Burnet 126 News of James s flight led to celebrations and anti Catholic riots in Edinburgh and Glasgow Most members of the Scottish Privy Council went to London On 7 January 1689 they asked William to take over government Elections were held in March for a Scottish Convention which was also a contest between Presbyterians and Episcopalians for control of the Kirk While only 50 of the 125 delegates were classed as Episcopalian they were hopeful of victory since William supported the retention of bishops 127 On 16 March a Letter from James was read out to the convention demanding obedience and threatening punishment for non compliance Public anger at its tone meant some Episcopalians stopped attending the convention claiming to fear for their safety and others changed sides 128 The 1689 1691 Jacobite Rising forced William to make concessions to the Presbyterians ended Episcopacy in Scotland and excluded a significant portion of the political class Many later returned to the Kirk but Non Juring Episcopalianism was the key determinant of Jacobite support in 1715 and 1745 129 The English Parliament held that James abandoned his throne The Convention argued that he forfeited it by his actions as listed in the Articles of Grievances 130 On 11 April the Convention ended James reign and adopted the Articles of Grievances and the Claim of Right Act making Parliament the primary legislative power in Scotland 131 On 11 May William and Mary accepted the Crown of Scotland after their acceptance the Claim and the Articles were read aloud leading to an immediate debate over whether or not an endorsement of these documents was implicit in that acceptance citation needed 132 page needed Under the 1542 Crown of Ireland Act the English monarch was automatically king of Ireland as well Tyrconnell had created a largely Roman Catholic army and administration which was reinforced in March 1689 when James landed in Ireland with French military support it took the two years of fighting of the Williamite War in Ireland before the new regime controlled Ireland Anglo Dutch alliance EditThough he had carefully avoided making it public William s main motive in organising the expedition had been the opportunity to bring England into an alliance against France 133 On 9 December 1688 he had already asked the States General to send a delegation of three to negotiate the conditions On 18 February Julian calendar he asked the convention to support the Republic in its war against France It refused only consenting to pay 600 000 for the continued presence of the Dutch army in England citation needed On 9 March Gregorian calendar the States General responded to Louis s earlier declaration of war by declaring war on France in return On 19 April Julian calendar the Dutch delegation signed a naval treaty with England It stipulated that the combined Anglo Dutch fleet would always be commanded by an Englishman even when of lower rank citation needed William and the Dutch were fine with this since the English land forces were largely fighting under Dutch officers 134 The treaty also specified that the two parties would contribute in the ratio of five English vessels against three Dutch vessels meaning in practice that the Dutch navy in the future would be smaller than the English citation needed The Navigation Acts were not repealed On 18 May the new Parliament allowed William to declare war on France On 9 September 1689 Gregorian calendar William as King of England joined the League of Augsburg against France citation needed The decline of the Dutch Republic Edit Having England as an ally meant that the military situation of the Republic was strongly improved but this very fact induced William to be uncompromising in his position towards France This policy led to a large number of very expensive campaigns which were largely paid for with Dutch funds In 1712 the Republic was financially exhausted and was forced to let its fleet deteriorate making what was by then the Kingdom of Great Britain the dominant maritime power of the world 135 The Dutch economy already burdened by the high national debt and concomitant high taxation suffered from the other European states protectionist policies which its weakened fleet was no longer able to resist To make matters worse the main Dutch trading and banking houses moved much of their activity from Amsterdam to London after 1688 Between 1688 and 1720 world trade dominance shifted from the Republic to Britain 135 Assessment and historiography EditWhile the 1688 revolution was labeled Glorious by Protestant preachers two decades later 136 its historiography is complex and its assessment disputed Thomas Macaulay s account of the Revolution in The History of England from the Accession of James the Second exemplifies the Whig history narrative of the Revolution as a largely consensual and bloodless triumph of English common sense confirming and strengthening its institutions of tempered popular liberty and limited monarchy 137 Edmund Burke set the tone for that interpretation when he proclaimed that The Revolution was made to preserve our ancient indisputable laws and liberties and that ancient constitution of government which is our only security for law and liberty 138 An alternative narrative emphasizes William s successful foreign invasion from the Netherlands and the size of the corresponding military operation Several researchers have emphasized that aspect particularly after the third centenary of the event in 1988 139 The historian J R Jones suggested that the invasion should be seen as the first and arguably the only decisive phase of the Nine Years War 140 The invasion story is unusual because the establishment of a constitutional monarchy a de facto republic see Coronation Oath Act 1688 and Bill of Rights meant that the apparently invading monarchs legitimate heirs to the throne were prepared to govern with the English Parliament It is difficult to classify the entire proceedings of 1687 1689 but it can be seen that the events occurred in three parts conspiracy invasion by Dutch forces and Glorious Revolution citation needed It has been argued that the invasion aspect had been downplayed as a result of British pride and effective Dutch propaganda trying to depict the course of events as a largely internal English affair 141 As the invitation was initiated by figures who had little influence the legacy of the Glorious Revolution has been described as a successful propaganda act by William to cover up and justify his invasion 142 page needed The claim that William was fighting for the Protestant cause in England was used to great effect to disguise the military cultural and political impact that the Dutch regime had on England A third version proposed by Steven Pincus underplays the invasion aspect but unlike the Whig narrative views the Revolution as a divisive and violent event that involved all classes of the English population not just the main aristocratic protagonists 143 page needed Pincus argues that his interpretation echoes the widely held view of the Revolution in its aftermath starting with its revolutionary labelling Pincus argues that it was momentous especially when looking at the alternative that James was trying to enact a powerful centralised autocratic state using French style state building England s role in Europe and the country s political economy in the 17th century rebuts the view of many late 20th century historians that nothing revolutionary occurred during the Glorious Revolution of 1688 89 Pincus says it was not a placid turn of events 144 In diplomacy and economics William III transformed the English state s ideology and policies This occurred not because William III was an outsider who inflicted foreign notions on England but because foreign affairs and political economy were at the core of the English revolutionaries agenda The revolution of 1688 89 cannot be fathomed in isolation It would have been inconceivable without the changes resulting from the events of the 1640s and 1650s The ideas accompanying the Glorious Revolution were rooted in the mid century upheavals The 17th century was a century of revolution in England deserving of the same scholarly attention that modern revolutions attract 144 page needed James II tried building a powerful militarised state on the mercantilist assumption that the world s wealth was necessarily finite and empires were created by taking land from other states The East India Company was thus an ideal tool to create a vast new English imperial dominion by warring with the Dutch and the Mughal Empire in India After 1689 came an alternative understanding of economics which saw Britain as a commercial rather than an agrarian society It led to the foundation of the Bank of England the creation of Europe s first widely circulating credit currency and the commencement of the Age of Projectors 145 This subsequently gave weight to the view advocated most famously by Adam Smith in 1776 that wealth was created by human endeavour and was thus potentially infinite 146 Impact Edit As a coup albeit largely bloodless its legitimacy rests in the will expressed separately by the Scottish and English Parliaments according to their respective legal processes 147 On this point the Earl of Shaftesbury declared in 1689 The Parliament of England is that supreme and absolute power which gives life and motion to the English government 148 The Revolution established the primacy of parliamentary sovereignty a principle still relevant in consultation with the 15 Commonwealth realms regarding succession issues clarification needed The Bill of Rights 1689 formally established a system of constitutional monarchy and ended moves towards absolute monarchy by restricting the power of the monarch who could no longer suspend laws levy taxes make royal appointments or maintain a standing army during peacetime without Parliament s consent The British Army remains the military arm of Parliament not the monarch although the Crown is the source of all military executive authority 149 page needed Unlike the 1638 to 1651 Wars of the Three Kingdoms most ordinary people in England and Scotland were relatively untouched by the Glorious Revolution the majority of the bloodshed taking place in Ireland As a consequence some historians suggest that in England at least it more closely resembles a coup d etat rather than a social upheaval such as the French Revolution 150 i This view is consistent with the original meaning of revolution as a circular process under which an old system of values is restored to its original position with England s supposed ancient constitution being reasserted rather than formed anew 152 Contemporary English political thought as expressed in John Locke s then popular social contract theory 153 linked to George Buchanan s view of the contractual agreement between the monarch and their subjects 154 an argument used by the Scottish Parliament as justification for the Claim of Right Under the Coronation Oath Act 1688 William had sworn to maintain the primacy of the Church of England which both his native Dutch Reformed Church and the Church of Scotland viewed as ideologically suspect in both doctrine and use of bishops This required a certain degree of religious flexibility on his part especially as he needed to placate his Catholic allies Spain and Emperor Leopold 155 Despite promising legal toleration for Catholics in his Declaration of October 1688 William failed due to domestic opposition 156 The Act of Toleration 1689 granted relief to Nonconformists but Catholic emancipation would be delayed until 1829 157 The Williamite War in Ireland can be seen as the source of later ethno religious conflict including The Troubles of the twentieth century The Williamite victory in Ireland is still commemorated by the Orange Order for preserving British and Protestant supremacy in the country In North America the Glorious Revolution precipitated the 1689 Boston revolt in which a well organised mob of provincial militia and citizens deposed the hated governor Edmund Andros In New York Leisler s Rebellion caused the colonial administrator Francis Nicholson to flee to England A third event Maryland s Protestant Rebellion was directed against the proprietary government seen as Catholic dominated Footnotes Edit Irish An Reabhloid Ghlormhar Scottish Gaelic Reabhlaid Ghlormhor Welsh Chwyldro Gogoneddus At the end of the year the Dutch army counted more than 70 000 men 61 When asked what security he desired Suasso allegedly answered If you are victorious you will surely repay me if not the loss is mine 69 His standard was hoisted displaying the arms of Nassau quartered with those of England The words Pro Religione et Libertate For Liberty and the Protestant Religion the slogan of William s ancestor William the Silent while leading the Dutch Revolt against Catholic Spain were shown next to the House of Orange s motto Je maintiendrai I will maintain There were seventy five vessels of the confederated Dutch navy Forty nine were warships of more than twenty cannon Eight of these could count as third rates of 60 68 cannon Additionally there were nine frigates twenty eight galliots and nine fireships Transports included seventy six fluyts for the soldiers 120 small transports with five thousand horses and about seventy supply vessels Also sixty fishing vessels served as landing craft 97 96 As was then common many were foreigners including Scots English German Swiss Swedes and Laplanders After the magistrates had fled the city he entered on a white palfrey with the two hundred black men forming a guard of honour dressed in white with turbans and feathers 107 Those in attendance were William Hamilton Duke of Hamilton William Craven 1st Earl of Craven George Berkeley 1st Earl of Berkeley Charles Middleton 2nd Earl of Middleton Southern Secretary Richard Graham 1st Viscount Preston Lord President of the Council and Northern Secretary Sidney Godolphin 1st Earl of Godolphin Chamberlain to the Queen and Treasury Commissioner John Trevor Master of the Rolls and Silius Titus The importance of the event has divided historians ever since Friedrich Engels judged it a relatively puny event 151 Citations Edit Black 2016 p 143 Padfield 1999 Schwoerer 2004 p 3 Harris 2006 p 144 Harris amp Taylor 2015 p 147 Pincus 2009 pp 441 442 Quinn Miller 1978 pp 124 125 Harris 1999 pp 28 30 Stephen 2010 pp 55 58 Miller 1978 p 44 Wormsley 2015 p 189 Jackson 2003 pp 38 54 Baker 2009 pp 290 291 Harris 2006 pp 153 155 Harris 2006 pp 106 108 Harris 1993 p 124 Wakeling 1896 p 91 Harris 2006 pp 179 181 Spielvogel 1980 p 410 Bosher 1994 pp 6 8 Harris 2006 p 103 Miller 1978 pp 156 157 Carpenter 1956 pp 96 98 Walker 1956 p 81 Harris 1993 p 130 Field 2012 p 695 Miller 1978 pp 171 172 Harris 2006 p 235 Miller 1978 pp 127 129 Jones 1988 p 146 Jones 1988 p 150 Childs 1987 p 184 Childs 1980 pp 96 97 Harris 2006 pp 235 236 Miller 1978 pp 81 82 Troost 2005 p 175 Stapleton 2003 pp 63 64 Troost 2001 p 187 Glozier 2000 pp 233 234 Miller 1978 pp 213 214 Harris 2006 pp 256 a b Jones 1988 p 222 Hoak 1996 p 24 Harris 2006 pp 256 257 Fagel 1688 Troost 2005 p 191 Prud homme van Reine 2009 p 287 Baxter 1966 p 225 Baxter 1966 p 231 Jones 1988 pp 238 239 Harris 2006 p 271 Dalrymple 1790 appendix to book v pp 107 110 Harris 2006 p 272 Claydon amp Levillain 2016 p 150 Miller 1978 p 153 Young 2004 pp 251 252 Duffy 1995 p 20 a b Troost 2005 p 198 Young 2004 p 255 Jardine 2008 p 38 Wijn 1950 p 6 Baxter 1966 pp 232 233 McKay amp Scott 1984 p 41 Jardine 2008 p 41 Miller 1978 pp 178 179 Jardine 2008 pp 39 40 Jardine 2008 p 37 Jardine 2008 p 52 Swetschinsky amp Schonduve 1988 p 53 Troost 2016 pp 206 207 Miller 1978 p 194 Miller 1978 p 195 Miller 1978 p 196 Troost 2001 p 196 Childs 1984 p 61 Holmes 2009 p 136 Troost 2005 pp 195 196 Miller 1973 pp 671 672 a b Harris 2006 p 285 Davies 2004 Burchett 1703 pp 14 17 a b Rodger 2004 p 138 Prud homme van Reine 2009 p 291 Miller 1973 p 679 Western 1972 p 259 Jardine 2008 p 29 Williams 1960 pp 10 16 Speck 1989 p 74 a b Speck 1989 pp 74 75 Troost 2001 p 199 a b c d Rodger 2004 p 137 Jones 1973 pp 201 221 Prud homme van Reine 2009 p 288 Jardine 2008 pp 10 11 Bander 2014 p 276 a b c Van Nimwegen 2020 p 183 185 a b Prud homme van Reine 2009 p 289 Western 1972 p 260 a b Prud homme van Reine 2009 pp 290 291 Harris 2006 p 203 Rodger 2004 p 139 Miller 1978 p 199 Rodger 2004 pp 137 139 Childs 1980 pp 175 Sowerby 2013 pp 347 348 Harris 2006 p 283 a b Miller 1978 p 204 Jardine 2008 p 16 Jardine 2008 pp 15 16 Jardine 2008 pp 31 32 Miller 1978 pp 201 202 Harris 2006 p 284 Miller 1978 p 205 a b Jardine 2008 p 17 Harris 2006 pp 296 300 The London Gazette 1688 p 2 sfn error no target CITEREFThe London Gazette1688 help Miller 1978 p 208 Jardine 2008 p 19 Huygens 1881 p 62 Harris 2006 p 319 Harris 2006 p 325 Miller 1978 p 209 Harris 2006 p 329 Pincus 2009 pp 292 293 Harris 2006 p 341 a b Maer amp Gay 2008 p 4 Harris 2006 p 165 Harris 2006 pp 379 381 Szechi 1994 pp 30 31 Szechi amp Sankey 2001 p 97 University of St Andrews Coward 1980 p 460 Troost 2005 Israel 1989 p 37 38 Van Nimwegen 2020 p page needed a b Vries amp Woude 1997 pp 673 687 Hertzler 1987 Pincus 2009 p 5 Goodlad 2007 De Krey 2008 pp 738 773 Vallance 2007 Taylor 1994 p 466 Jardine 2008 p 27 Schwoerer 1977 Pincus 2009 a b Pincus 2009 pp Wennerlind 2011 p 109 Pincus 2009 pp 369 370 Lynch 1992 p 302 Bradley 2007 p 28 Windeyer 1938 Webb 1995 p 166 Engels 1997 p 269 Mitchell 2009 pp xvi xviii xix Mason amp Smith 2004 De Jure Regni apud Scotos 2015 Israel 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Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 00 713750 3 2009 Marlborough England s Fragile Genius Harper Press ISBN 978 0007225729 Horwitz Henry 1977 Parliament Policy and Politics in the Reign of William III Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 0661 6 Huygens Constantijn 1881 Journaal van Constantijn Huygens den zoon gedurende de veldtochten der jaren 1688 Volume I Kemink amp Zoon Israel Jonathan Parker Geoffrey 1991 Israel J I ed Of Providence and Protestant Winds the Spanish Armada of 1588 and the Dutch armada of 1688 inThe Anglo Dutch Moment Essays on the Glorious Revolution and its world impact Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 39075 0 Israel Jonathan I 2003 The Anglo Dutch Moment Essays on the Glorious Revolution and its World Impact Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521544061 Israel Jonathan 1989 The Dutch Republic and the Glorious Revolution of 1688 89 in England Greenwich Trustees National Maritime Museum pp 31 44 ISBN 9780948065033 Jackson Claire 2003 Restoration Scotland 1660 1690 Royalist Politics Religion and Ideas Boydell Press ISBN 978 0851159300 Jardine Lisa 2008 Going Dutch How England Plundered Holland s Glory Harper ISBN 978 0 00 719734 7 Jones Clyve 1973 The Protestant Wind of 1688 Myth and Reality European Studies Review 3 3 201 221 doi 10 1177 026569147300300301 S2CID 145465379 Jones J R 1988 The Revolution of 1688 in England Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 99569 2 No 2410 The London Gazette 17 December 1688 p 2 Lynch Michael 1992 Scotland a New History Pimlico Publishing ISBN 0712698930 Macaulay Thomas Babington 1889 The History of England from the Accession of James the Second Popular Edition in Two Volumes Vol I London Longmans Maer Lucinda Gay Oonagh 2008 The Coronation Oath House of Commons Library p 4 Marquess of Cambridge 1966 The March of William of Orange from Torbay to London 1688 Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research XLIV Mason Roger A Smith Martin S 2004 A Dialogue on the Law of Kingship A Critical Edition and Translation of George Buchanan s De Jure Regni Apud Scotos Dialogus Routledge ISBN 9781859284087 OL 3684214M McKay Derek Scott H M 1984 The Rise of the Great Powers 1648 1815 Longman ISBN 0582485541 Miller John 1978 James II A study in kingship Menthuen ISBN 978 0413652904 Miller John 1973 The Militia and the Army in the Reign of James II Historical Journal 16 4 659 679 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00003897 JSTOR 2638277 S2CID 159475416 Mitchell Leslie 2009 1790 Introduction In Burke Edmund ed Reflections on the Revolution in France Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 953902 4 Padfield Peter 25 May 1999 Historical Notes Glorious revolution or Orange invasion The Independent Retrieved 25 February 2021 Pincus Steve 2009 1688 The First Modern Revolution 2011 ed Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 17143 3 Prud homme van Reine Ronald 2009 Opkomst en Ondergang van Nederlands Gouden Vloot Door de ogen van de zeeschilders Willem van de Velde de Oude en de Jonge Amsterdam De Arbeiderspers ISBN 978 90 295 6696 4 Quinn Stephen The Glorious Revolution Economic History Association EH net Retrieved 1 October 2020 Rodger N A M 2004 The Command of the Ocean A Naval History of Britain 1649 1815 Penguin Group ISBN 978 0 393 06050 8 Schuchard Keith 2002 Restoring the Temple of Vision Cabalistic Freemasonry and Stuart Brill ISBN 978 90 04 12489 9 Schwoerer Lois G 1977 Propaganda in the Revolution of 1688 1689 The American Historical Review 82 4 843 874 doi 10 2307 1865115 JSTOR 1865115 ed 2004 The Revolution of 1688 89 Changing Perspectives Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52614 2 Sowerby Scott 2013 Making Toleration The Repealers and the Glorious Revolution Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 07309 8 Speck William Arthur 1989 Reluctant Revolutionaries Englishmen and the Revolution of 1688 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 285120 8 Speck William Arthur 2002 James II Longman ISBN 978 0 582 28712 9 Spielvogel Jackson J 1980 Western Civilization Wadsworth Publishing ISBN 1285436407 Stanhope Philip Henry 5th Earl of 2011 Notes of Conversations with the Duke of Wellington 1831 1851 Pickle Partners Publishing footnote 90 ISBN 978 1 908692 35 1 Stapleton John M 2003 Forging a Coalition Army William III the Grand Alliance and the Confederate Army in the Spanish Netherlands 1688 97 PHD thesis Ohio State University Stephen Jeffrey January 2010 Scottish Nationalism and Stuart Unionism The Edinburgh Council 1745 Journal of British Studies 49 1 Scotland Special Issue 47 72 doi 10 1086 644534 JSTOR 27752690 S2CID 144730991 Swetschinsky Daniel Schonduve Loeki 1988 De familie Lopes Suasso financiers van Willem III Zwolle ISBN 978 90 6630 142 9 Szechi Daniel 1994 The Jacobites Britain and Europe 1688 1788 Manchester University Press ISBN 0719037743 Sankey Margaret November 2001 Elite Culture and the Decline of Scottish Jacobitism 1716 1745 Past amp Present 173 Taylor Stephen June 1994 Review Plus Ca Change New Perspectives on the Revolution of 1688 The Historical Journal 37 2 457 470 Troost Wouter 2001 Stadhouder koning Willem III Een politieke biografie Hilversum Uitgeverij Verloren ISBN 90 6550 639 X 2005 William III the Stadholder king A Political Biography Routledge ISBN 978 0754650713 2016 The Image of William III in Amsterdam after His Ascent to the English Throne The Case of the Sheriffs Election in 1690 Dutch Crossing 40 3 206 218 doi 10 1080 03096564 2016 1139783 S2CID 155630754 Grievances of the Scottish Convention April 13 1689 University of St Andrews Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707 Retrieved 28 June 2019 Vallance Edward 2007 The Glorious Revolution BBC History Retrieved 15 August 2010 Van der Kuijl Arjen 1988 De glorieuze overtocht De expeditie van Willem III naar Engeland in 1688 Amsterdam De Bataafsche Leeuw ISBN 978 90 6707 187 1 Vries Jan de Woude Ad van der 1997 The First Modern Economy Success Failure and Perseverance of the Dutch Economy 1500 1815 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57061 9 Van Nimwegen Olaf 2020 De Veertigjarige Oorlog 1672 1712 de strijd van de Nederlanders tegen de Zonnekoning The 40 Years War 1672 1712 the Dutch struggle against the Sun King in Dutch Prometheus ISBN 978 90 446 3871 4 Wijn J W 1950 Het Staatsche Leger Deel VII The Dutch States Army Part VII in Dutch Martinus Nijhoff Wakeling George Henry 1896 King and Parliament A D 1603 1714 Scribner ISBN 978 0 524 03867 3 Walker Peter 1956 James II and the Three Questions Religious Toleration and the Landed Classes 1687 1688 Verlag Peter Lang ISBN 978 3039119271 Webb Stephen Saunders 1995 Lord Churchill s Coup The Anglo American Empire and the Glorious Revolution Reconsidered Alfred Knopf ISBN 978 0394549804 Wennerlind Carl 2011 Casualties of Credit The English Financial Revolution 1620 1720 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674047389 Western John R 1972 Monarchy and Revolution The English State in the 1680s London Blandford Press ISBN 978 0 7137 3280 1 Williams E N 1960 The Eighteenth Century Constitution 1688 1815 Cambridge University Press OCLC 1146699 Windeyer W J Victor 1938 Essays In Windeyer William John Victor ed Lectures on Legal History Law Book Co of Australasia Wormsley David 2015 James II The Last Catholic King Allen Lane ISBN 978 0141977065 Young William 2004 International Politics and Warfare in the Age of Louis XIV and Peter the Great A Guide to the Historical Literature IUinverse ISBN 978 0595813988 Further reading EditAshley Maurice 1966 The Glorious Revolution of 1688 Hodder amp Stoughton Cruickshanks Eveline 2000 The Glorious Revolution British History in Perspective Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 23009 8 OL 9818099M DeKrey Gary S 2007 Restoration and Revolution in Britain A Political History of the Era of Charles II and the Glorious Revolution Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 65103 2 Glassey Lionel K J ed 1997 The Reigns of Charles II and James VII and II ISBN 978 0 333 62500 2 Hamowy Ronald 2008 Glorious Revolution The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks California SAGE Cato Institute pp 208 211 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n125 ISBN 978 1 4129 6580 4 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 MacCubbin R P Hamilton Phillips M eds 1988 The Age of William III and Mary II Power Politics and Patronage 1688 1702 College of William and Mary in Virginia ISBN 978 0 9622081 0 2 McCaffrey Carmel 2006 In Search of Ireland s Heroes Ivan R Dee ISBN 978 1 56663 615 5 OL 8670276M Miller John 1997 The Glorious Revolution 2 ed ISBN 978 0 582 29222 2 Ogg David 1956 William III ISBN 978 0 758 18954 7 OL 13525080M Onnekink David 2007 The Anglo Dutch Favourite The Career of Hans Willem Bentinck 1st Earl of Portland 1649 1709 Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 5545 9 Pincus Steven C A 2005 England s Glorious Revolution 1688 1689 A Brief History with Documents Bedford St Martin s ISBN 978 0 312 16714 1 OL 24936969M Prall Stuart 1972 The Bloodless Revolution England 1688 Anchor Books OCLC 644932859 Vallance Edward 2006 The Glorious Revolution 1688 Britain s Fight for Liberty Brown Little ISBN 978 1 933648 24 8 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Glorious Revolution Weiss B 2014 Medals of the Glorious Revolution The Influence of Catholic Protestant Antagonism PDF ANS Magazine Vol 13 no 1 New York American Numismatic Society pp 6 23 Archived PDF from the original on 19 December 2014 Glorious Revolution on In Our Time at the BBC Charles II 1630 1685 BBC History Retrieved 15 August 2010 English Revolution of 1688 Catholic Encyclopedia The Civil War team presented by Tristram Hunt 7 January 2001 Aftershocks The Glorious Revolution open2 net BBC amp Open University Quinn Stephen 17 April 2003 The Glorious Revolution of 1688 In Whaples Robert ed EH Net Encyclopedia Royal Household at Buckingham Palace ed 2008 2009 History of the Monarchy gt United Kingdom Monarchs 1603 present gt The Stuarts gt Mary II William III and The Act of Settlement gt William III r 1689 1702 and Mary II r 1689 1694 Official web site of the British Monarchy Wilkes Donald E Jr Kramer Matthew The Glorious Revolution of 1688 Retrieved 15 August 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Glorious Revolution amp oldid 1134958941, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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