The American historian Eric Loomis, a key contributor to the long-lived blog Lawyers, Guns and Money, has an equally long-running series there called "Eric Visits an American Grave" in which he visits and photographs the graves of more or less famous Americans and gives a quick and often opinionated appreciation of their lives and careers. He likes union members, and pop musicians, never mentions a Southern Confederate without applying the phrase "treason in defence of slavery, and tends to be hard on captains of industry with elaborate monuments. He has published over two thousand of these "Visits" at AGM. I find them admirable as blogging and often intriguing and informative as history, since he is widely informed about American history and frequently up on the latest scholarship.
Loomis visited Britain some time ago and has begun adding visits to non-American graves. Americans! You can take them out of the country but...
His latest non-American grave is that of King Charles II (died 1685), and this time he has completely misunderstand the man and his history. Loomis takes him to be a nice, practical guy, smart and curious but beset with Britain's endless Protestant-Catholic hatreds, and that's about it.
Some years ago I was massively impressed by the massive study of Charles's period and subsequent events written by the historian of Early Modern Britain Steve Pincus, called 1688: The First Modern Revolution. Pincus makes a powerful case that Charles II was a skilled and ambitious king, with big plans to modernize England's economy and governance -- but that his model for modernizing was Louis XIV of France, whose powerfully autocratic personal rule Charles intended to recreate in England. Had Charles lived longer and succeeded in his program, Britain might well have entered the 18th century as autocratic as France under the Bourbon monarchs who brought on the French revolution.Pincus argues that the "Glorious Revolution" of 1688, which deposed Charles's brother and heir James II, was a profound struggle about two modernizing programs, one intensely monarchical, the other committed to binding kings to parliamentary (and eventually democratic) control. For Pincus, it was the English Whigs' unwillingness to tolerate the autocratic model Charles was instituting that brought on the upheavals of 1688 and the replacement of James II by William of Orange (and Mary), whose Dutch model of capitalism development they preferred. And their victory permanently confirmed parliamentary rather then monarchical supremacy in Britain. So: a huge reshaping of European and world history -- with Charles central to it, though on the losing side in the end.
I still like "Eric Visits an American Grave" but it's too bad Loomis has extended his coverage without extending his reading. Particularly since Steve Pincus, professor of history at the University of Chicago, is a fellow American. I think he would like it.




