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5 A commonwealth counselled

Russia’s resonances in late Elizabethan England
  • Felicity Jane Stout
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Abstract

This chapter considers Giles Fletcher's key arguments in relation to discussions of late Elizabethan politics, suggesting that Fletcher's text resonated with popular representations of tyranny whether Spanish, French, Scottish or even English tyranny. His depiction of Russia's parliament provided further explication of how corrupt forms of counsel detrimentally affected the commonwealth. Fletcher's evident support for a mixed-estate view of government, through his critique of the Russian parliament, offers an indication of where he may have placed himself politically in relation to the late Elizabethan regime. He used the pervasive language of anti-popery to describe the Russian church and to record how Russian Orthodox religious practices and doctrines resembled some of the worst abuses of 'popery'. The extensive use in Fletcher's text of the language of anti-popery points to resonances with the anxieties and concerns that riddled the political and religious consciences and contexts of late Elizabethan England.

Abstract

This chapter considers Giles Fletcher's key arguments in relation to discussions of late Elizabethan politics, suggesting that Fletcher's text resonated with popular representations of tyranny whether Spanish, French, Scottish or even English tyranny. His depiction of Russia's parliament provided further explication of how corrupt forms of counsel detrimentally affected the commonwealth. Fletcher's evident support for a mixed-estate view of government, through his critique of the Russian parliament, offers an indication of where he may have placed himself politically in relation to the late Elizabethan regime. He used the pervasive language of anti-popery to describe the Russian church and to record how Russian Orthodox religious practices and doctrines resembled some of the worst abuses of 'popery'. The extensive use in Fletcher's text of the language of anti-popery points to resonances with the anxieties and concerns that riddled the political and religious consciences and contexts of late Elizabethan England.

Heruntergeladen am 26.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7765/9781784996871.00013/html
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