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  A Comparative History of the Supply and Maintenance of the English Navy c1650-85 (JOWITT-U21LEV)


   School of History

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  Prof Claire Jowitt, Dr Benjamin Redding  No more applications being accepted  Funded PhD Project (UK Students Only)

About the Project

Based on archival research, including the examination of maritime records held at regional and national archives, including The National Archives and The National Maritime Museum, the thesis will explore how issues of supply and maintenance affected the service of, in particular, the Third-Rate frigates built in the 1652 Programme – Gloucester, Essex, Plymouth, Torrington, Newbury, Bridgewater, Lyme, Marston Moor, Langport, Fairfax, Tredagh. The proposed PhD will explore, document, and analyse data relating to the supply and maintenance of a number of mid-seventeenth-century warships across an important period of naval administrative reform and of political and regime changes. Given the naval administrative reforms of the mid-seventeenth century led by Samuel Pepys as clerk of the acts to the navy board and later secretary to the Admiralty, and the political turbulence of the period leading to alterations in key personnel, an important question is how dynamic were these economic processes in this period? The work undertaken by the studentship will add to the understanding of distinctive areas of early modern naval and maritime history and will begin to redress the imbalance of traditional accounts which underplay the role of economic history and administrative reform. It will be the first study to bring detailed analysis to the ways economics and the politics of supply lines determined the working and resting lives of seventeenth-century ships, explored in the context of the transition between the Cromwellian regime and Stuart rule and the history of naval reform.

For more information on the supervisor for this project, please go here: https://people.uea.ac.uk/c_jowitt

This is a PhD programme. Interview date 8th June 2021. The start date is 1st October 2021. The mode of study is full time. The studentship length is 3 years.

Entry requirements:

Acceptable first degree 2:1 History. A Masters in Naval History or a related subject would be desirable.


History & Archaeology (19) Languages, Literature & Culture (21)

Funding Notes

This studentship is part of a project which has been selected for funding by the Leverhulme Trust. Eligible candidates will be considered for a 3 year PhD studentship. Usually, UK nationals who have been ordinarily resident in the UK for 3 years are eligible for a full award, which pays tuition fees and research costs as well as a stipend. The stipend will be paid at standard UKRI rates as a minimum.

References

i) Bernard Capp, Cromwell's Navy: The Fleet and the English Revolution 1648-1660 (OUP, 1989).
ii) J. D. Davies, Gentlemen and Tarpaulins: The Officers and Men of the Restoration Navy (Clarendon Press, 1991).
iii) J. D. Davies, Kings of the Sea: Charles II, James II and the Royal Navy (Seaforth Publishing, 2017).
iv) Richard Endsor, The Restoration Warship (US Naval Institute Press, 2009).
v) Claire Jowitt et al, eds, The Routledge Companion to Marine and Maritime Worlds 1400-1800 (Routledge, 2020).

Where will I study?

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