The chapter looks at devotional and religious books printed in England in English between 1476 and 1526. Why they are what they are is a consideration throughout, but specifically in the second part of the chapter, which considers some examples of the conduits of religious texts to the printers. As a whole, the chapter is informed by the publication in 1409 of Archbishop Arundel’s Constitutions, and assesses their effect on publication during this period
Publisher\u27s description: Westminster Abbey is closely connected with the early history of printi...
Martin Luther, the first Protestant, was also the central figure in the West's first media campaign....
Six presses owned by religious houses belonging to the Devotio Moderna were active during the period...
The first Bible to be printed in England was produced in by the royal printer, and with Henry VIII’...
Religious printing in Jacobean and Caroline England and the measures taken to regulate it have not g...
Printing in the Anglo-Saxon type began in the mid-sixteenth century in a burst of activity that was ...
This book is the first in-depth study of the production and use of Bibles in late medieval and early...
This book investigates the reception of medieval manuscripts over a long century, 1470–1585, spannin...
This thesis explores developments in the English print world in a period of turbulent religious chan...
In much of the historiography surrounding print culture and the book trade, the worldliness of print...
Lay Bible reading took hold in England after the Protestant Reformation, and the ramifications of th...
The contemporary printed literature of the English Counter-Reformation between 1558 and 1640 : an an...
In Reformation studies, the printed Bible has long been regarded as an agent of change. This dissert...
This article proposes that the study of popular reading should be incorporated into the modern histo...
The introduction of the printing press in the transitional age between the late Middle Ages and the ...
Publisher\u27s description: Westminster Abbey is closely connected with the early history of printi...
Martin Luther, the first Protestant, was also the central figure in the West's first media campaign....
Six presses owned by religious houses belonging to the Devotio Moderna were active during the period...
The first Bible to be printed in England was produced in by the royal printer, and with Henry VIII’...
Religious printing in Jacobean and Caroline England and the measures taken to regulate it have not g...
Printing in the Anglo-Saxon type began in the mid-sixteenth century in a burst of activity that was ...
This book is the first in-depth study of the production and use of Bibles in late medieval and early...
This book investigates the reception of medieval manuscripts over a long century, 1470–1585, spannin...
This thesis explores developments in the English print world in a period of turbulent religious chan...
In much of the historiography surrounding print culture and the book trade, the worldliness of print...
Lay Bible reading took hold in England after the Protestant Reformation, and the ramifications of th...
The contemporary printed literature of the English Counter-Reformation between 1558 and 1640 : an an...
In Reformation studies, the printed Bible has long been regarded as an agent of change. This dissert...
This article proposes that the study of popular reading should be incorporated into the modern histo...
The introduction of the printing press in the transitional age between the late Middle Ages and the ...
Publisher\u27s description: Westminster Abbey is closely connected with the early history of printi...
Martin Luther, the first Protestant, was also the central figure in the West's first media campaign....
Six presses owned by religious houses belonging to the Devotio Moderna were active during the period...