New Atlas of the British & Irish Flora: An Atlas of the Vascular Plants of Britain, Ireland, the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands

Taxon ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 52 (4) ◽  
pp. 884
Author(s):  
Rudolf Schmid ◽  
C. (Chris) D. Preston ◽  
D. (David) A. Pearman ◽  
T. (Trevor) D. Dines ◽  
H. R. Arnold ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
David Cressy

This chapter shows how the victors in the civil wars emulated the royalist regime by isolating enemies in island prisons. Victims of the Commonwealth and Protectorate included cavalier conspirators sent to the Isle of Wight and the Channel Islands, religious radicals held on the Isle of Wight and Scilly, and dissident army officers exiled to Jersey, Guernsey, and the Isle of Man. Revolutionary England supported a chain of offshore prisons, where inmates often likened themselves to the godly prisoners of Scripture. Sufferers included the Leveller John Lilburne, the Fifth Monarchist John Rogers, the Unitarian John Biddle, and the republican Robert Overton. Some construed their prison island as Patmos, and Oliver Cromwell’s England at Babylon.


Author(s):  
David Cressy

This chapter examines the religious culture and ecclesiastical arrangements of various island communities, showing how devotional activities and godly discipline were affected by politics and custom. The Isle of Wight was part of the Diocese of Winchester, with patterns of conformity and dissent similar to those of the mainland. Lundy was extra-parochial, and forgotten by the bishops of Exeter. The Scillies, too, belonged to the diocese of Exeter, but episcopal influence was almost invisible. The Isle of Man had its own bishop, but godly conformity was rarely attained. Religious radicals reached most islands in the decades of revolution, and lingered or revived in the later seventeenth century. The Channel Islands, as ever, were anomalous, having adopted a Presbyterian discipline under Elizabeth I. Jersey was brought into conformity with England’s prayer book and canons, at least officially, in the reign of James I, but Presbyterianism continued in Guernsey until the Restoration. Each island experienced conflicts in the later seventeenth century over worship, discipline, conformity, and dissent. The disputes of laity and clergy, deans and bailiffs, and governors and the godly formed an offshore drama against the continuing development of the national Church of England.


Author(s):  
David Cressy

The Introduction locates major islands in the seas around England and indicates how their relationships to the rest of the kingdom reflected legacies of history, jurisdictional peculiarities. constitutional arrangements, foreign wars, and commerce. It previews island involvement in the stresses and struggles of English history associated with state formation, Reformation, Revolution, Restoration, and modernity. The Channel Islands, the Isles of Scilly, the Isle of Wight, the Isle of Man and other offshore territories were difficult to administer and sometimes prone to neglect. Yet their strategic positions gave them value and importance that far outweighed their size. Though English governments saw the islands as appurtenances or dependencies of the state, the islanders more often regarded their homes as privileged places.


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