Smuts 1987

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Smuts, R. Malcolm. Court Culture and the Origins of a Royalist Tradition in Early Stuart England. Philadelphia; University of Pennsylvania Press, 1987.
"Caroline styles often have much closer affinities to the style sof the eighteenth or early nineteenth centuries than to work completed barely a generation earlier. And these stylistic changes were symptomatic of a much more fundamental reorientation of attitudes, values, patterns of conspicuous consumption, and modes of thought and feeling." (1)

Charles as first monarch to grow up reading Jonson, Donne, Shakespeare; first since Middle Ages to spend some time in a great European court, first since Mary Tudor to marry into a Catholic dynasty of the continent and welcome a papal envoy at court (2)

historians have tended to see a strong division between Court and Country as causing the Civil War, but divisions were much messier; was no consolidated "country" culture, rather lots of local subcultures

"As paradoxical as it may sound, Stuart court culture was at once an outgrowth of the trend toward a more urbanized and cosmopolitan aristocratic society and an expression of a deep mistrust of the transformations this trend was bringing about." (8)

The Stuarts and the Elizabethan Legend

for Elizabeth, progresses and lack of royal patronage (but much aristocratic patronage) meant "the cult of monarchy took shape through soemthing resembling a ceremonial dialogue between court and country, as the royal household and various individuals and communities joined in aodring the queen, responding to each other's cues, and weaving new variants around the stock symbols of the reign" (18)

Elizabethan imperialism centered on the oceans (19)

James ascension brought renewed emphasis on peace; images of Arthur transformed from chivalric to one of British unity (24-5)

James feared crowds and "popularity"

"hopes of those seeking a return to Elizabethan policies crystallized around James' heir, Prince Henry" (29) -- then Elizabeth (his sister)