148 research outputs found

    The cannibal cavalier: Sir Thomas Lunsford and the fashioning of the royalist archetype

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    This article re-examines the career of Sir Thomas Lunsford, one of the most notorious royalist officers of the English Civil War. Drawing on a wide range of contemporary sources, it not only casts new light on the pre-war activities of Lunsford himself but also explores the ways in which his blood-thirsty reputation was exploited by parliamentarian polemicists on the eve of the conflict. The article argues that, following the death of the proto-royalist playwright and plotter Sir John Suckling in 1641, Lunsford inherited Suckling's mantle as the archetypal ‘cavalier’, and that it was in association with Sir Thomas's name, rather than Sir John's, that the hostile caricature of the royalist gentleman-at-arms was first introduced to the English population as a whole. The article concludes by exploring the persistent rumours of cannibalism which have swirled around Lunsford's name for the past 370 years – and by demonstrating that, while the claim that Sir Thomas possessed a taste for human flesh may well have originated in the parliamentarian camp, it was, rather surprisingly, royalist writers who subsequently did most to keep his anthropophagical reputation alive

    History's big numbers

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    Exeter in the Civil War

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    Writing Religious Conflict and Community in Exeter, 1500-1750: an interview with Professor Mark Stoyle (podcast)

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    I was interviewed by Dr David Parry about religious conflict in the city of Exeter between the Reformation and the Restoration

    Pagans or paragons? Images of the Cornish during the English Civil War

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    This article explores the contrasting ways in which the Cornish people were depicted by Parliamentarian and Royalist polemicists during the English Civil War

    Expert comment: English Civil War Petitions

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    Historians at the universities of Cardiff, Leicester, Nottingham and Southampton have embarked on a four-year project to discover the human cost of the Civil War that ravaged Britain in the 17th century. Project co-investigator Mark Stoyle tells us more
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