There has been much recent examination of late medieval lay piety in order to understand the background to Henry VIII's reformation, notably Colin Richmond's studies of the ‘privatised’ religion of the English gentry. Such work has largely over-looked papal sources and the associated issue of relations between English and Welsh society and the papacy. This article seeks to remedy this neglect by presenting new evidence from the registers of the papal penitentiary. In the late middle ages the papal penitentiary was the highest office in the western Church concerned with matters of conscience and the principal source of papal absolutions, dispensations and licences. Petitions seeking such favours were copied in its registers, and this article...
The intellectual and spiritual ambition of the Catholic Church can be seen in the popular work of la...
In the 1530s, the Church of England was separated from Roman Catholic Christendom by religious legis...
Reformation studies have been transformed since the ground-breaking research of Eamon Duffy and othe...
The papal penitentiary was the highest body in the later medieval Church concerned with matters of c...
This article examines the textual and manuscript evidence for the practice of penance in late Saxon ...
The apostolic penitentiary was the central office of the late medieval Western church concerned with...
The lack of native ecclesiastical sources, such as Episcopal registers or ordination rolls, has seri...
The Roman Catholic Church, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, waa an international organizat...
Medieval indulgences have long had a troubled public image, grounded in centuries of confessional di...
Papal privileges were documents issued in the names of the bishops of Rome, granting or confirming ...
This thesis examines the use and interpretation of praemunire from its fourteenth-century creation t...
An appeal to the Roman Rota launched in 1511 may seem unusual in the reign of Henry VIII because of ...
The twenty-first canon, Omnis utriusque sexus, of the Fourth Lateran Council made annual confession ...
This is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Journal of Medieval Hist...
Henry VIII’s closure of all of England’s 900 monasteries by 1539 permanently transformed religious l...
The intellectual and spiritual ambition of the Catholic Church can be seen in the popular work of la...
In the 1530s, the Church of England was separated from Roman Catholic Christendom by religious legis...
Reformation studies have been transformed since the ground-breaking research of Eamon Duffy and othe...
The papal penitentiary was the highest body in the later medieval Church concerned with matters of c...
This article examines the textual and manuscript evidence for the practice of penance in late Saxon ...
The apostolic penitentiary was the central office of the late medieval Western church concerned with...
The lack of native ecclesiastical sources, such as Episcopal registers or ordination rolls, has seri...
The Roman Catholic Church, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, waa an international organizat...
Medieval indulgences have long had a troubled public image, grounded in centuries of confessional di...
Papal privileges were documents issued in the names of the bishops of Rome, granting or confirming ...
This thesis examines the use and interpretation of praemunire from its fourteenth-century creation t...
An appeal to the Roman Rota launched in 1511 may seem unusual in the reign of Henry VIII because of ...
The twenty-first canon, Omnis utriusque sexus, of the Fourth Lateran Council made annual confession ...
This is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Journal of Medieval Hist...
Henry VIII’s closure of all of England’s 900 monasteries by 1539 permanently transformed religious l...
The intellectual and spiritual ambition of the Catholic Church can be seen in the popular work of la...
In the 1530s, the Church of England was separated from Roman Catholic Christendom by religious legis...
Reformation studies have been transformed since the ground-breaking research of Eamon Duffy and othe...