Conformity and Orthodoxy in the English Church, C. 1560-1660Peter Lake, Distinguished University Professor of Early Modern English History Peter Lake, Michael C. Questier Boydell & Brewer, 2000 - 296 pages The different ways in which people expressed `conformity' or `nonconformity' to the 1559 settlement of religion in the English church have generally been treated separately by historians: Catholic recusancy and occasional conformity; Protestant ministerial subscription to the canons and articles of the Church of England; the innovations made by avant-garde conformist clerics to the early Stuart Church; and conformist support for the prayer book in the 1640s. This is the first book to look across the board at what was politically important about conformity, aiming to assess how different attitudes to conformity affected what was regarded as orthodox or true religion in the English Church: that is, the political and cultural significance of the ways in which one could obey or disobey the law governing the Church. The introduction places the articles in the context of the recent historiography of the late Tudor and early Stuart Church. PETER LAKE is Professor of History, Princeton University; MICHAEL QUESTIER is Senior Research Fellow, St Mary's Strawberry Hill. Contributors: ALEXANDRA WALSHAM, MICHAEL QUESTIER, PAULINE CROFT, KENNETH FINCHAM, THOMAS FREEMAN, PETER LAKE, ANDREW FOSTER, NICHOLAS TYACKE, DAVID COMO, JUDITH MALTBY. |
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Table des matières
Lancelot Andrewes and the Myth of Anglicanism | 5 |
John Darrell and the Politics | 34 |
Puritans Predestination and the Construction of Orthodoxy in Early | 64 |
Old Conformity in the 1640s1650s | 88 |
Conformity as Process Defining the Entry Requirements | 121 |
Archbishop Richard Neile Revisited | 159 |
Moving the Goal Posts? Modified Subscription and | 179 |
Conformity Orthodoxy | 211 |
Conformity Catholicism and the Law | 237 |
The Catholic Gentry the Earl of Salisbury and the Baronets | 262 |
283 | |
Expressions et termes fréquents
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