Lawrence Stone and the historiography of the 'gentry controversy'
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LAWRENCE STONE AND THE HISTORIOGRAPHY OF THE GENTRY CONTROVERSY
The
controversy over the economic and social origins of the English
Revolution was a topic that excited ferocious debate over sixty years
ago. Historians of the calibre of R.H.Tawney and Hugh Trevor-Roper,
J.P.Cooper, Christopher Hill and Lawrence Stone advanced radically
different interpretations to explain the violent events of the 1640s and
1650s in the British Isles. American scholars, most famously of all,
J.H.Hexter, like Willson Coates, Harold Hulme, Judith Shklar and Perez
Zagorin also commented with varying degrees of sharpness on the issues
at stake. But only one of the major participants, Lawrence Stone,
offered an account of the historiography of the dispute, first of all in
his introduction to the anthology of academic articles and documentary
sources entitled Social Change and Revolution in England 1540-1640which he edited in 1965 and then, in slightly revised form, in Chapter 2 of his work, The Causes of the English Revolution 1529-1642, published in 1972. It is with this account that this note is concerned.
Stone
began the earlier version of his essay with a description of the
genesis of the controversy. He found it in R.H.Tawney's article on the
rise of the gentry between 1558 and 1641 published in 1941. Tawney had
detected important changes in the distribution of landownership in the
period before the English Civil War due to the decline in the fortunes
of old-fashioned landlords and the rise of a new class of gentry able to
adopt modern methods of estate management and to profit thereby. As a
result, the political structure of the country shifted in and after 1640
to accommodate these economic and social changes. Tawney's argument was
underpinned by statistics claiming to show a fall in the size of the
peerage's manorial holdings compared to those of the gentry and a
contraction in large manorial holdings in contrast to a growth in
medium-sized manorial holdings. Apparent confirmation on the decline of
the aristocracy was offered by Stone himself in an article published in
1948 which argued that the late-Elizabethan peerage was weighed down by
debts due to over-spending and on the brink of financial ruin. Only the
largesse of King James VI and I averted aristocratic collapse.
Stone
was admirably frank in retrospect in admitting to his use of
extravagant language in this article, to his statistical errors and
failings over his employment of corollary evidence in response to Hugh
Trevor-Roper's initial criticisms. Nonetheless, he maintained a revised
version of his original position in 1952. This proved the catalyst for
Trevor-Roper's wider assault on Tawney's thesis in the following year:
according to Trevor-Roper, the difficulties of the lesser or mere or
small gentry were more characteristic of the pre-Civil War period than
the advance of newly-risen gentry who were able to profit from Court
offices, the law and mercantile monopolies. These lesser gentry
constituted the 'Country party' whose supporters overthrew the Caroline
regime in 1640, who advocated decentralization, reform of the law, the
reduction of offices, etc., and who were the mainstay of the
Independents in the latter half of the 1640s and in the 1650s.
Subsequently, J.P.Cooper demolished the framework upon which Tawney and
Stone had erected their manorial figures. By then, Stone asserted, the
way had been cleared for the general acceptance of the Trevor-Roper
thesis.
In fact, according to Stone, it was not until 1958-1959 that
Trevor-Roper's arguments were seriously criticised when Christopher Hill
and Perez Zagorin exposed the fragile nature of his assumptions about
the lack of profitability of agriculture for landowners in general,
about the Court as a highway to riches and about religious radicalism as
a refuge from economic decline. There were serious problems too over
Trevor-Roper's analysis of the Parliamentary politics of the 1640s and
identification of the Independents as the party of the small gentry.
J.H.Hexter was equally critical of Tawney and Trevor-Roper: the former
was obsessed by the Marxist theory of the rise of the bourgeoisie and
the latter by economic motives rather than by ideals and ideology,
politics and religion. Hexter preferred and proffered an analysis based
on the decline of the aristocracy in military rather than economic
terms, the assumption of political leadership by the House of Commons
instead of the House of Lords, and the traditional constitutional and
religious explanations for the breakdown of the 1640s.
By
the time Hexter's essay first appeared in 1958, Stone was engaged in a
major study of the aristocratic archives which had become available
since 1945 and which culminated in his book, The Crisis of the Aristocracy, 1558-1641,
published in 1965. He claimed in his discussion of the social origins
of the English Revolution that this book offered a synthesis of his own
and Hexter's ideas about the problems facing the late-Tudor and
early-Stuart peerage. Stone argued that the aristocracy had lost
military power, landed possessions and prestige: their incomes under
Elizabeth had declined due to conspicuous consumption but recovered
under James and Charles due to royal largesse and rising landed incomes.
The King and the Church of England were nonetheless left dangerously
exposed by the crisis in the affairs of the landed elite after pursuing
unpopular constitutional and religious policies up to 1640. The prior
decline of the aristocracy made the upheavals of that decade possible.
He expected criticisms of his arguments in 1965 and conceded that a
range of questions over the fortunes of the gentry would be raised: the
debate would inevitably continue. Seven years later, there had indeed
been criticism but also, in his view, the development of a more
sophisticated view of the causes of the English Revolution.
This
account of the historiography of the gentry controversy looked
straightforward enough and attracted no attention in 1965 or 1972.
Lawrence Stone had claimed that the publication of Trevor-Roper's essay
on The Gentry 1540-1640in
1953 and of J.P.Cooper's analysis of the statistics on manorial
holdings produced by Tawney and Stone himself had apparently “cleared
[the way] for general acceptance of the Trevor-Roper thesis.” He had
gone on to maintain that it “was not until 1958 and 1959 that the
Trevor-Roper thesis in turn came under serious criticism” from Hill,
Zagorin and Hexter, the latter of whom was also critical of Tawney. But
these arguments were and are fundamentally at variance with the record.
Take Hill for example. The essay Stone cited was entitled Recent Interpretations of the Civil War.
It had been given as a paper to the Mid-Wales branch of the Historical
Association in January, 1955 and was published in Volume LXI of Historyin
1956. It had a number of specific objections to Trevor-Roper's
categorization of the gentry, to his alleged elision of the terms
“mere”, “lesser” and “declining” gentry, to his belief that it was the
Crown rather than the peasantry from whom rising gentlemen secured their
gains and so on. This essay was reproduced in Hill's volume of essays
entitled Puritanism and Revolutionpublished in 1958. In Zagorin's case, he had published a paper in the Journal of World History
in 1955 entitled 'The English Revolution 1640-1660' in which he took
the view that Trevor-Roper's criticisms of Tawney and Stone remained to
be substantiated and that it was unlikely that the revolution could be
regarded as rising of the excluded “mere gentry.”A year later, in 1956,
Zagorin gave the paper entitled 'The Social Interpretation of the
English Revolution' at the meeting of the American Historical
Association: an enlarged version of his text expressing his objections
to Trevor-Roper's arguments appeared in the Journal of Economic History and is noted in Stone's bibliography in 1965. It was incidentally at this AHA meeting that Hexter's essay, Storm over the Gentry, was given its first outing. Furthermore, when Past and Presentorganised
a conference on seventeenth-century revolutions in London in July,
1957, the consensus of historians present was, according to Eric
Hobsbawm, “unfavourable to Prof. Trevor-Roper's views that they [the
gentry] represented a declining class”, a verdict endorsed as far as
this meeting was concerned by J.H.Elliott many years later. J.H.Hexter's
famous essay in Encounterin
1958 was, as those who read it in its original version or in the longer
1961 version, more hostile to Tawney and Stone and comparatively benign
in its analysis of Trevor-Roper's case. Conscripting Hexter to the
ranks of the latter's critics is a difficult exercise to perform. It
was, in any case, simply not true to argue that there was a delay until
1958-1959 until Trevor-Roper's arguments came under critical scrutiny.
On the contrary, there had been serious, perhaps partially-organised,
scepticism expressed well before then.
Why
did Stone offer this clearly erroneous account? There are two
possibilities. Either he had forgotten the facts and thus misled himself
and his readers. Prima facie, this seems unlikely. Alternatively, this
exercise may have been undertaken deliberately. There is some evidence
to support the latter explanation. In the spring of 1964, Hexter invited
Stone to give a lecture at Washington University in St Louis
“undoubtedly [as] some sort of peace-offering to one of the many victims
of his scalding wit” according to John M.Murrin, then a colleague of
Hexter and later of Stone at Princeton. Both the invitation and the
lecture were a success. But whereas, in 1958, Stone had regarded
Hexter's views on the military decline of the aristocracy as inadequate
in explaining the peerage's problems in the 1640s, by 1965, Stone was
prepared to claim that The Crisis“developed
a new interpretation, an amalgam of some of my earlier ideas and those
of J.H.Hexter.” What contribution Hexter had made to this new synthesis
is difficult to detect since he was mentioned only once in the text –
and not at all in the chapter on Power – and only twice in its
footnotes. There is really no positive evidence for Hexter's influence
on Stone's opus. But a rapprochement had occurred. When Hexter published
his review of The Crisis in the Journal of British Studiesin
1968, his critical faculties so evident a decade before had been
largely suspended and his overall verdict was laudatory. Hexter had
become a “friend” of Stone as Murrin explained in the festschrift to
mark Stone's retirement and had contributed to the volume of essays
marking Hexter's own retirement.
Was Stone ignorant about the course of the 'gentry controversy' between 1953 and 1958 or 1959? Given his direct participation in it, this appears highly unlikely. On balance, the erroneous account he offered in 1965 and again in 1972 and the unsubstantiated deference to Hexter seem to owe more to a desire to placate and neutralise a potentially serious critic and to recruit him to Stone's camp. If this is a tenable line of argument, it illustrates Stone's failings as an historian in a particularly revealing way.
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