fatbadger said:3. All forms of entertainment were not banned - this is a myth.
Didn't they shut all the theatres?
fatbadger said:3. All forms of entertainment were not banned - this is a myth.
Albion Rob said:The problem with history, as I see it, is that there is so much of it and it's growing by the day I tell you.![]()
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crasher said:Didn't they shut all the theatres?
fatbadger said:You missed my point.
A republic which replaced the monarchy that went before it was, indeed, better. That's not to say it was good, just better.
On some of your specific points:
1. There was no democracy to suspend.
2. Religious and political liberty was much greater under the Commonwealth and Protectorate than it had been under the Stuarts. Roman Catholicism was, effectively, banned (although not really greatly harrassed - as long as you kept it private, you were generally left alone); the majority of Protestant forms which had been harrassed, banned and oppressed under the monarchy were allowed to be practised; and the Jews were finally (formally) allowed back into England for the first time since their expulsion in the 14th century.
3. All forms of entertainment were not banned - this is a myth.
4. Christmas is a fairly complex theological issue - I don't take the position that was held, but I do think it was understandable. But please note Christmas was not 'banned' - the festivities (in the form they had taken) were.
5. 'religious maniacs' is stretching the case rather too far - indeed, it just isn't true. Again, this is a bit of a myth, created in the 19th century. Since then, the importance of secularism and non-theological politics to the make-up, laws and behaviour of both the Commonwealth and the Protectorate have been well-studied and are now accepted by all but the most blinkered of old-style liberals.
Gwylan said:
That period also saw the publication of the Authorised Version of the Bible, English literature's finest moment.
Yorkie said:It was just a direct translation of the original Greek & Hebrew into the language of the day.
fatbadger said:You are on very, very dodgy ground there, Yorkie!
fatbadger said:And the very best bits of the KJV are the bits they directly cribbed from Tyndale! And, where they differ, the Tyndale version is invariably better. However, Tyndale never completed the translation, so there is not truly a 'Tyndale Bible' - only parts of one. And if you are happy to go for partial versions (and depending on what you consider 'English' to be), then Tyndale wasn't first, anyway - there were all manner of Lollard versions being copied and transmitted around Britain many years before Tyndale started working.