This book offers an alternative interpretation of pre-Civil War England, challenging the standard narrative that English presbyterianism was successfully extinguished from the late sixteenth century until its prominent public resurgence during the English Civil War. From their emergence in the 1570s, English presbyterians posed a threat to the Church of England, and, in 1592, the English crown arrested the leaders of the presbyterian movement. Ha shows that, during the ensuing half century of apparent silence, English presbyterians remained continually active. They made a concerted effort, for example, to build an alliance with common lawyers against episcopal authority. Yet they also sought to prove the compatibility of their church govern...
Historically Oliver Cromwell's 1650 invasion of Scotland and the subsequent decade long occupation ...
This thesis explores the responses of different groups within the English Catholic community to the ...
During the era of the American Revolution, King George III and his supporters perceived that the war...
This book offers an alternative interpretation of pre-Civil War England, challenging the standard na...
This thesis opens with a survey of state policy and puritan political opinion from the 1620's to the...
Puritanism was a strain of English Protestantism that emerged after the re-establishment of the Prot...
International audienceAlthough it would be a dubious claim to call it forgotten or overlooked, the f...
The position of English monarchs as supreme governors of the Church of England profoundly affected e...
The broader clash between Charles I and Parliament that became the English Civil Wars was reflected ...
England experienced great societal changes in the seventeenth-century. Deep rooted tensions between ...
This thesis tackles Presbyterian Church government and the Covenanted interest during the Commonweal...
In 1983 John Morrill concluded a lecture before the Royal Historical Society in London with the obse...
Puritans entered a novel position of power in the early 1640s. Their attempts to ‘combat’ heretics a...
This book examines the role of religion in the story of Oliver Cromwell's invasion and subsequent oc...
American Presbyterians frequently circulate the claim that King George III of England referred to th...
Historically Oliver Cromwell's 1650 invasion of Scotland and the subsequent decade long occupation ...
This thesis explores the responses of different groups within the English Catholic community to the ...
During the era of the American Revolution, King George III and his supporters perceived that the war...
This book offers an alternative interpretation of pre-Civil War England, challenging the standard na...
This thesis opens with a survey of state policy and puritan political opinion from the 1620's to the...
Puritanism was a strain of English Protestantism that emerged after the re-establishment of the Prot...
International audienceAlthough it would be a dubious claim to call it forgotten or overlooked, the f...
The position of English monarchs as supreme governors of the Church of England profoundly affected e...
The broader clash between Charles I and Parliament that became the English Civil Wars was reflected ...
England experienced great societal changes in the seventeenth-century. Deep rooted tensions between ...
This thesis tackles Presbyterian Church government and the Covenanted interest during the Commonweal...
In 1983 John Morrill concluded a lecture before the Royal Historical Society in London with the obse...
Puritans entered a novel position of power in the early 1640s. Their attempts to ‘combat’ heretics a...
This book examines the role of religion in the story of Oliver Cromwell's invasion and subsequent oc...
American Presbyterians frequently circulate the claim that King George III of England referred to th...
Historically Oliver Cromwell's 1650 invasion of Scotland and the subsequent decade long occupation ...
This thesis explores the responses of different groups within the English Catholic community to the ...
During the era of the American Revolution, King George III and his supporters perceived that the war...