Bloodsuckers of the Commonwealth

About The Book

This book offers the first in-depth analysis of anti-monopoly petitioning in late-Elizabethan and Jacobean England. Drawing on a range of manuscript petitions it reveals the centrality of the issues of monopoly and corporatism for the politicisation of a range of subjects between 1590-1625. Both Elizabeth I and James I liberally granted monopolies and charters as a fiscal device. Petitioning emerged as the main way through which subjects protested these intrusions on their trades and livelihoods. Whilst this activity occurred throughout the realm it was especially pronounced in the city of London. Members of London's livery companies bodies which held exclusive rights to trade petitioned for and against monopolies and charters. <i>Bloodsuckers of the Commonwealth </i>offers a fresh perspective on political culture in this well-studied period by arguing that economic policies generated conflicts contests and participation in a nascent public sphere.
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