Creamer, Joseph P., In the footsteps of Becket: episcopal sanctity in England, 1170-1270, Thèse de doctorat soutenue en 2011, (dir. R. Stacey, University of Washington) Résumé/abstract : This dissertation explains why holy bishops were so common in England while they were rare on the continent in the century after the murder of Thomas Becket by the king's men in 1170. The Introduction shows how Becket's sanctity was based on resistance to the king, but also drew on other models of episcopal h..
The vestiarian controversies of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in England have attracted an...
This paper investigates the purpose and the power of the reformed episcopate in seventeenth-century ...
O'Rourke Samuel, Episcopal power in Anglo-Norman England, 1066-1135, Thèse de doctorat soutenue en 2...
In 1170 the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket in his own Cathedral sent shockwaves through Europe, ...
In 1250 the chronicler Matthew Paris had noticed a boom in English sanctity where ‘it seemed therefo...
Church leaders have always been seen as shepherds, expected to feed their flock with teaching, to gu...
My PhD offers a reassessment of the representation of English bishops within episcopal vitae compose...
In July 1220, the boy king Henry III attended the translation of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury, whe...
In 1214, King John issued a charter granting freedom of election to the English Church; henceforth, ...
Early Christian theology presumed that the clergy were subject to both ecclesiastical and secular la...
Thirteenth-century England was a special place and time to be a bishop. Like their predecessors, the...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
England's first Tudor monarchs were formally devoted to the cult of St Thomas of Canterbury. In popu...
This essay considers the special place of cathedrals in early modern English antiquarian works throu...
After the Norman Conquest, Lanfranc was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury in 1070. With William the...
The vestiarian controversies of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in England have attracted an...
This paper investigates the purpose and the power of the reformed episcopate in seventeenth-century ...
O'Rourke Samuel, Episcopal power in Anglo-Norman England, 1066-1135, Thèse de doctorat soutenue en 2...
In 1170 the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket in his own Cathedral sent shockwaves through Europe, ...
In 1250 the chronicler Matthew Paris had noticed a boom in English sanctity where ‘it seemed therefo...
Church leaders have always been seen as shepherds, expected to feed their flock with teaching, to gu...
My PhD offers a reassessment of the representation of English bishops within episcopal vitae compose...
In July 1220, the boy king Henry III attended the translation of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury, whe...
In 1214, King John issued a charter granting freedom of election to the English Church; henceforth, ...
Early Christian theology presumed that the clergy were subject to both ecclesiastical and secular la...
Thirteenth-century England was a special place and time to be a bishop. Like their predecessors, the...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
England's first Tudor monarchs were formally devoted to the cult of St Thomas of Canterbury. In popu...
This essay considers the special place of cathedrals in early modern English antiquarian works throu...
After the Norman Conquest, Lanfranc was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury in 1070. With William the...
The vestiarian controversies of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in England have attracted an...
This paper investigates the purpose and the power of the reformed episcopate in seventeenth-century ...
O'Rourke Samuel, Episcopal power in Anglo-Norman England, 1066-1135, Thèse de doctorat soutenue en 2...