A Political Biography of William King


Christopher Fauske


Eighteenth-Century Political Biographies
Hb: 256pp: 2011
978 1 84893 010 0: 234x156mm: £60.00/$99.00
E ISBN   978 1 84893 011 7

William King (1650–1729) was perhaps the dominant Irish intellect of the period from 1688 until his death. An Anglican (Church of Ireland) by conversion, King was a strident critic of John Toland and the clerical superior of Jonathan Swift. Politically King was pivotal to the emergence of the modern concept of the liberal nation state: his defence of the Church of Ireland led him to develop a theory of national rights and privileges that would influence thinkers such as Thomas Paine. King, a staunch conservative, was nonetheless an honest intellectual, a modest and devoted servant of his church and his nation and was at the very heart of the European Enlightenment.

Sample pages

Readership

Eighteenth-Century Studies, Irish History and Political History

Contents

Introduction
1 Disruption
2 Settlement
3 Progress
4 Success
5 Frustration
6 Legacy

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