Independence Day: The Second Domino

UK science fiction writer Charles Stross on the meaning of the Fourth of July:

Independence Day does carry some associated freight. It lies not the public holiday, but in the historic event it commemorates: the moment when the second major rupture between the English-speaking peoples and their government came to a head. (The first such moment, interestingly, doesn’t rate a public holiday either in the USA or the UK: it remains politically controversial to this day; but without this shocking precedent the political establishment of the New England colonies, never mind their progress towards independence, would have taken a very different course.)

And, glibly leap-frogging across thirty years of history, it can be argued that without the US War of Independence the French monarchy wouldn’t have mortgaged itself into a smoking hole in the ground; there would have been no revolutionary republic: no Emperor Napoleon: and the whole shape of politics and history throughout Europe (which in this context stretches from Lisbon to Vladivostok) would be unrecognizably different today.

So: Independence Day — an un-holiday — Declaration of Independence of the United States of America — the second domino in a chain that is still collapsing in thunder to this day, rattling through the annals of history.

Quick: Without going over to Charlie’s blog, can you identify the first domino, i.e., the “shocking precedent”?

Posted on Friday, July 04 2008 | Permalink

It is, of course, the Glorious Revolution, in which the British monarch’s power was, for a time, overthrown.

Posted by  on  07/04  at  09:16 PM

Good guess, but not quite right.

Posted by Professor Bainbridge  on  07/04  at  10:39 PM

The beheading of Charles II and the establishment of the Commonwealth by Oliver Cromwell and the Roundheads.

Posted by  on  07/05  at  03:48 AM

I erred on the monarch.  Charles I was beheaded when tried for treason by Parliament.

Posted by  on  07/05  at  12:35 PM

Surely the reference is to Henry VIII’s break with Rome and the establishment of the Church of England.

Posted by Jasper  on  07/05  at  02:29 PM

I see I am going to have to get a book on English history, perhaps Churchill’s history.

Posted by  on  07/07  at  02:36 PM
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