In 1534, Henry VIII declared himself the supreme head of the Church of England. In the years that followed, his advisors carried out an agenda to reform the Church. In 1536, the Crown condemned pilgrimages and the veneration of saints’ shrines and relics. By the end of the seventeenth century, nearly every shrine in England and Wales had been destroyed or fell into disuse except for St. Winefride’s shrine in Holywell, Wales. The shrine has continued to be a pilgrimage destination to the present day without disruption. Contemporary scholars have credited the shrine’s survival to its connections with the Tudor and Stuart regimes, to the successful negotiation for its shared use as both a sacred and secular space, and to the missionary efforts...
There are preconceptions about the Tudor and Stuart period when it comes to the religious identity o...
In July 1220, the boy king Henry III attended the translation of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury, whe...
The reign of Henry III (1216-1272) was one of many firsts. The first reign under the Magna Carta, a ...
In 1534, Henry VIII declared himself the supreme head of the Church of England. In the years that fo...
Recent historiography discusses the English Reformation focusing on the viewpoint of British Isles o...
The break from the Catholic Church and the formation of the Anglican Church of England in 1547 resul...
Historians have recently taken a renewed interest in the role of the Roman Catholic community within...
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of Warwickshire during the reign of Elizabeth I (1...
There has been much recent examination of late medieval lay piety in order to understand the backgro...
The Roman Catholic Church, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, waa an international organizat...
In 1645, as the First Civil War approached its end, a second Reformation took place which created pr...
Medieval indulgences have long had a troubled public image, grounded in centuries of confessional di...
This paper investigates the social, political, and religious changes and tensions which surrounded t...
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of the Midlands counties during the reign of Eliza...
Two notable late‐medieval images depicting St Edmund King and Martyr, or his shrine, associate his c...
There are preconceptions about the Tudor and Stuart period when it comes to the religious identity o...
In July 1220, the boy king Henry III attended the translation of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury, whe...
The reign of Henry III (1216-1272) was one of many firsts. The first reign under the Magna Carta, a ...
In 1534, Henry VIII declared himself the supreme head of the Church of England. In the years that fo...
Recent historiography discusses the English Reformation focusing on the viewpoint of British Isles o...
The break from the Catholic Church and the formation of the Anglican Church of England in 1547 resul...
Historians have recently taken a renewed interest in the role of the Roman Catholic community within...
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of Warwickshire during the reign of Elizabeth I (1...
There has been much recent examination of late medieval lay piety in order to understand the backgro...
The Roman Catholic Church, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, waa an international organizat...
In 1645, as the First Civil War approached its end, a second Reformation took place which created pr...
Medieval indulgences have long had a troubled public image, grounded in centuries of confessional di...
This paper investigates the social, political, and religious changes and tensions which surrounded t...
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of the Midlands counties during the reign of Eliza...
Two notable late‐medieval images depicting St Edmund King and Martyr, or his shrine, associate his c...
There are preconceptions about the Tudor and Stuart period when it comes to the religious identity o...
In July 1220, the boy king Henry III attended the translation of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury, whe...
The reign of Henry III (1216-1272) was one of many firsts. The first reign under the Magna Carta, a ...