An Age of Wonders

Prodigies, politics and providence in England 1657-1727

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William E. Burns
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A woman gives birth to a monster. An army of mice invades a rural area. Three suns are seen in the sky. Today, such phenomena epitomize the intellectually marginal, relegated to the journalism of the supermarket checkout line. There have been, however, many societies where these events were not marginal, but important clues to understanding the nature of the cosmos and the destiny of human society. The transformation of this attitude to one resembling ours in a particular society, that of late Stuart England, is the subject of this book. One term that the people of seventeenth-century England used to refer to such bizarre natural phenomena was 'prodigy'. The word had many uses, but its core meaning was that of a strange and aberrant event, the occurrence of which appeared to be outside the usual order of nature. The most important status a prodigy could have was that of a providential sign from God. Prodigies had been interpreted as divine messages since ancient times. Prodigies were a particularly important site for competing discourses concerning God, nature, and politics because England lacked an official body or profession charged with the investigation and interpretation of alleged wonder. Prodigies were involved in the major political crises of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries in England, from the Restoration itself to the Popish Plot and the Exclusion Crises, to the revolution of 1688 and the accession of the House of Hanover.

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