The article claims that men and women in mixed marriages often subverted patriarchal norms when attempting to escape ecclesiastical censure in early modern Scotland. Ministers held husbands responsible for ensuring the conformity of their households, and they insisted that Protestant husbands bring their wives into the fold. These husbands then argued that they had no right to compel their wives in matters of conscience. Some even insisted that they had no control over their wives whatsoever. They were willing to appear failing in their patriarchal duties in order to protect their wives from the kirk, which was loath to interfere much further in marital relationships. Married women risked excommunication for their defiance, but local author...
Centuries after the Reformation, the ruins of the Cathedral of St Andrew, once the centre of the med...
By examining different forms of deviance, this article asks how the religious reforms brought about ...
The Reformation in Scotland brought with it a substantial theological shift in perspective toward th...
The article claims that men and women in mixed marriages often subverted patriarchal norms when atte...
This article explores the ways women interacted with the Scottish kirk in the decades prior to the N...
This article examines the swearing of collective religious covenants in early modern Scotland. Scotl...
Protestant Scotland demonstrated a remarkable unity and unparalleled resistance to schism in its fir...
A gendered analysis of religious violence in early modern England has still to be written. It seeks ...
Scotland was unique in Western Europe in continuing to accord legal validity to irregular marriage u...
In the pre-modern era, Scotland experienced twelve times the number of witchcraft accusations and ex...
The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries witnessed a striking event in European monarchies: four quee...
Early modern Scotland was a religious society where the doctrine of Calvinism permeated everyday li...
This article explores how communities of female religious within the English sphere of influence in ...
The article analyses how the decrees of the Council of Trent regarding marriage were used by the Chu...
Laura Stewart’s Rethinking the Scottish Revolution frequently noted the important role played by wom...
Centuries after the Reformation, the ruins of the Cathedral of St Andrew, once the centre of the med...
By examining different forms of deviance, this article asks how the religious reforms brought about ...
The Reformation in Scotland brought with it a substantial theological shift in perspective toward th...
The article claims that men and women in mixed marriages often subverted patriarchal norms when atte...
This article explores the ways women interacted with the Scottish kirk in the decades prior to the N...
This article examines the swearing of collective religious covenants in early modern Scotland. Scotl...
Protestant Scotland demonstrated a remarkable unity and unparalleled resistance to schism in its fir...
A gendered analysis of religious violence in early modern England has still to be written. It seeks ...
Scotland was unique in Western Europe in continuing to accord legal validity to irregular marriage u...
In the pre-modern era, Scotland experienced twelve times the number of witchcraft accusations and ex...
The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries witnessed a striking event in European monarchies: four quee...
Early modern Scotland was a religious society where the doctrine of Calvinism permeated everyday li...
This article explores how communities of female religious within the English sphere of influence in ...
The article analyses how the decrees of the Council of Trent regarding marriage were used by the Chu...
Laura Stewart’s Rethinking the Scottish Revolution frequently noted the important role played by wom...
Centuries after the Reformation, the ruins of the Cathedral of St Andrew, once the centre of the med...
By examining different forms of deviance, this article asks how the religious reforms brought about ...
The Reformation in Scotland brought with it a substantial theological shift in perspective toward th...