Bővebb ismertető
nrERODuoTicai The Reatoratlon Age CI66O-I688:)
The Restoration of Charles II in 1660 was far flTom a simple return to the status quo of pre-revolutlonary circumstances. It produced a new arrangement of social forces in order to create a government corresponding to the actual proportion of powers. The middles classes of the towns proved too weak to be a firm governmental "basis; the political change did not simply mean tbi? Restoration of the Stuart monarchy, but rather a compromise between landowners and the higher strata of society. The character of the Restoration is clearly manifested In the rearrangement of landowner ship. Church and Crown-property confiscated by the Republic were reestablished, but feudal tenures were never restored. "In the days of the Stuart Restoration" says Marx, "the Einglish landowners carried out under the new form of law an usurpation which upon the Continent was everywhere affected without any legal formalities. They abolished the feudal tenure of land, this meaning that they got rid of eJ.1 the landowners' obligations to the state; they 'indemnified* the state by imposing taxes upon the peasantry and the common people in general, they established modem proprietary rights to estates hitherto held upon feudal tenure" (Capital, II. p, 801) In this respect the Restoration was not the reversal, but rather the completion of the Revolution. Parliamentary Power.
Politically the royal prerogative suffered a mortal blow. The control of trade and finance, the judiciary and the army had been transferred into the hands of Parliament. The Cavalier Parliament of 1661 was dominated by the royalist gentry, and it created the "Clarendon Code" to settle religious questions. It
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