The word regiment is used here in what is now a largely archaic sense, meaning government or regime; the contemporary evocation of a fearsome military sisterhood makes the title even more colourful now than originally. This was taken advantage of by the novelist Terry Pratchett, whose novel Monstrous Regiment features both women and military matters rather prominently.
The book was written anonymously from Geneva, Switzerland, against the female sovereigns of his day, particularly Mary I of Scotland and Mary I of England. Knox, a staunch Protestant Reformer, opposed the Roman Catholic queens on religious grounds, and on their account he poured upon their whole gender some of the most memorable misogynistic invective ever recorded in political history:
His diatribe against female rulers backfired on him when Elizabeth I of England succeeded her half-sister Mary on the throne of England: Elizabeth was a supporter of the Protestant cause, but took offence at Knox's words about female sovereigns. Her opposition to him personally became an obstacle to Knox's direct involvement with the Protestant cause in England after 1559.
1558 books | Political books | Non-fictional Scottish literature
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It uses material from the
"The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women".
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