“Common Weal” and “Commonwealth”: England’s Monarchical Republic in the Making

Watts JL
Edited by:
Gamberini, A, Genet, J-P, Zorzi, A

This paper considers the effects of the reception of classical language and literature in late fifteenth- and early sixteenth-century England, focusing on the theme of republicanism. It argues that Roman republican discourses played a significant part in the legitimation and development of more centralised, conciliar and legalistic forms of royal power in the course and aftermath of the Wars of the Roses.