Revel, Riot, and Rebellion
Essay title: Revel, Riot, and Rebellion
In, Revel, Riot & Rebellion, David Underdown, intends to address two questions: How did the English common people behave during the conflicts of 1640-1660 and how can this behavior be explained? Essentially, Underdown sets out to prove that regional variations of the common peoples allegiance can be understood as a result of cultural differences within the various regions, focusing on the region of Somerset, Dorset, and Wiltshire. He does so by examining what variables, ideological, social, and geographical, influenced their alignment with King or Parliament within this region. He chooses this region because due to its various geographies, economies, and settlement types as well as its fluctuating control, one can examine the differing actions of the common people called into question.
Thus Underdowns hypothesis is, “that contrasts in popular allegiance had a regional basis, and were related to local differences in social structure, economic development, and culture.” He draws