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Alevel Essay plan: How significant was parliamentary radicalism in causing divisions in the long parliament between November 1640 and August 1642?

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A high-quality A-Level History essay plan for AQA Option 2E, exploring the role of parliamentary radicalism in dividing the Long Parliament between 1640 and 1642. Includes a full introduction, conclusion, and exam-focused analysis to help students write stronger 25-mark answers and boost their grades.

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How significant was parliamentary radicalism in causing divisions in the long​

parliament between November 1640 and August 1642? 25 marks​


​INTRODUCTION:​​Divisions in long parliament accumulated​​and intensified overtime​
​ ue to various significant factors. In this essay I will be discussing three factors​
d
​that contributed heavily to the divisions in Parliament, one being the actions and​
​retaliation towards Parliament of Charles I across his three kingdoms. For​
​instance, the Scottish plot against Parliament by Charles in the incident of October​
​1641 and later Charles’ plot to free Strafford in May 1641 further lead to debates​
​and divides in Long Parliament over the assertion of parliamentary power and​
​radicalism over the royalists and Charles I. Another factor that contributed to the​
​divide in the Long Parliament was the uprising of popular radicalism and rebellions​
​from the general population, which emphasised the influence of parliamentary​
​radicals on the population compared to the alienation of the population from the​
​monarchy. Therefore, this leads onto the most significant factor which stimulated​
​the key disagreements within Long Parliament, in particular individuals like Pym​
​introduced radical policies that aggravated existing points of conflicts such as​
​religion within Long Parliament.​

PARA 1:​
​ ​Parliamentary Radicalism​
​Point: This factor acted as a significant internal factor of divisions and a catalyst​
​of external aggravators of conflicts in parliament​
​Evidence 1: Pym and parliamentary radicals (Henry Vane, Hampden) Pyms aims:​
​-anti-Catholic (reform church (LINK TO ROOT AND BRANCH PETITION)​
​-Organise kings finances (Ship money)​
​-Enact against dissolution of Parliament​
​Evidence 2: Root and Branch Petition December 1640 - presented by Pym to reform​
​church to original state. Causing many debates, it was shelved in August 1641. The 3​
​sides to the proposal: - restore church to original state​
​-​ ​Completely change episcopacy to Puritan congregational​
​-​ ​Just remove Laudianism from church​
​Evidence 3: Grand Remonstrance December 1641 - Created by Pym’s recess​
​committee (Hampden in this committee) overviewing Charles’ personal rule blaming​
​evil advisers and demanding of constitutional change. Caused division in Parliament​
​(HOWEVER STIMULATED BY CHARLES’ ACTIONS)​
​Counter: It was Charles’ actions that initially stimulated these divisions and calls​
​for debate​
​Relative: Most significant but also decreased by Charles’ actions that are a​
​catalyst, the biggest internal factor of conflict in parliament.​

PARA 2:​
​ ​Actions of Charles​
​Point: Charles turned to deploying his remaining powers (control of the military​
​until the militia bill of December 1641 and rising powers in parliament) in order to​
​win back the powers he had lost, causing events that sparked disagreements​
​amongst parliament.​
​Evidence 1: Incident October 1641 - Charles visited Scotland with a plot to remove​
​the most radical parliamentarians with military force whilst parliament​
​simultaneously sent spies to keep an eye on him. This plan was leaked and​
​highlighted mistrust between radicals and royalists​

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