This article sheds new light on the interesting but little-studied figure of Thomas Scott of Canterbury (1566-1635). In presenting Scott's ideas I will modify the interpretation laid out by Peter Clark whose groundbreaking study, 'Thomas Scott and the Growth of Urban Opposition to the Early Stuart Regime', is still the only secondary source that pays detailed attention to Scott and his thought, especially his religious opinions. The necessity to revisit Clark's interpretation of Scott's place within the political and doctrinal debates of early Stuart England stems from the conviction that his political work and his ideological stances deserve more subtle attention. Most importantly, they were part of the emerging reaction against the polici...
Robert Parsons has long enjoyed a bad reputation, mostly due to his Spanish sympathies and his defen...
"Recent research has begun to highlight the importance of German arguments about legitimate resistan...
This study examines the development of theories of civil religion in Hanoverian Britain. In the afte...
The Anglo-Spanish negotiations for a dynastic alliance which began in 1614 had never been popular am...
In his short but controversial publishing career, the radical Protestant polemicist Thomas Scott (ca...
What did it mean to be a Catholic elite in Protestant England? The relationship between the Protesta...
The article deals with interconnection and close interlacing of religious and political issues in th...
The beginning of negotiations in 1614 for a dynastic marriage between Prince Charles and the Infant...
AbstractThis essay reconsiders the character and significance of Edmund Burke's attitude to the seve...
The purpose of this paper is to examine the idea and role of the Puritan gentry of early Stuart Engl...
James VI and I was the first king to rule both England and Scotland. He was unique among British mon...
This article seeks to redress a contemporary critical trend amongst social historians concerned to d...
Comparative analysis of the impact of religion on liberal political development is hampered by the p...
This thesis opens with a survey of state policy and puritan political opinion from the 1620's to the...
England's first Tudor monarchs were formally devoted to the cult of St Thomas of Canterbury. In popu...
Robert Parsons has long enjoyed a bad reputation, mostly due to his Spanish sympathies and his defen...
"Recent research has begun to highlight the importance of German arguments about legitimate resistan...
This study examines the development of theories of civil religion in Hanoverian Britain. In the afte...
The Anglo-Spanish negotiations for a dynastic alliance which began in 1614 had never been popular am...
In his short but controversial publishing career, the radical Protestant polemicist Thomas Scott (ca...
What did it mean to be a Catholic elite in Protestant England? The relationship between the Protesta...
The article deals with interconnection and close interlacing of religious and political issues in th...
The beginning of negotiations in 1614 for a dynastic marriage between Prince Charles and the Infant...
AbstractThis essay reconsiders the character and significance of Edmund Burke's attitude to the seve...
The purpose of this paper is to examine the idea and role of the Puritan gentry of early Stuart Engl...
James VI and I was the first king to rule both England and Scotland. He was unique among British mon...
This article seeks to redress a contemporary critical trend amongst social historians concerned to d...
Comparative analysis of the impact of religion on liberal political development is hampered by the p...
This thesis opens with a survey of state policy and puritan political opinion from the 1620's to the...
England's first Tudor monarchs were formally devoted to the cult of St Thomas of Canterbury. In popu...
Robert Parsons has long enjoyed a bad reputation, mostly due to his Spanish sympathies and his defen...
"Recent research has begun to highlight the importance of German arguments about legitimate resistan...
This study examines the development of theories of civil religion in Hanoverian Britain. In the afte...