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Counsel was a fundamental element of politics in medieval and early modern England and Scotland. It assisted decision-making; facilitated dialogue, representation, accountability, consent and consensus; and was used tactically to delegate, delay and criticise decisions. Despite the platitudinous commonplace that good rulers heard advice, counsel was fraught with tension. Whose advice was wisest, whether it should be given in institutional councils, and its relationship to sovereignty, were questions at the heart of thirteenth- to seventeenth-century political debate. Emphasising counsel over c ... More
Keywords: counsel, privy council, sovereignty, monarchy, England, Scotland, medieval, early modern, politics, political culture
Print publication date: 2016 | Print ISBN-13: 9780197266038 |
Published to British Academy Scholarship Online: May 2017 | DOI:10.5871/bacad/9780197266038.001.0001 |
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