This study will examine the complicated relationship between female religious expression and society during the sixteenth century Reformation. Luther originally formulated Protestant society in a way where women would be located in the home and away from the dangerous, but religiously critical, concept of martyrdom. Even in England, where society was different from that of Germany, women were still expected to behave subserviently to men in matters of religion and chose to reject outside forms of control of their faith. John Foxe wrote extensively on the women in question and his book formed a model for examining and discussion Reformation martyrdom. By using Foxe\u27s book, as well as a number of other primary and secondary sources, I will...
Late medieval devotional practice adapted the Roman martyr\u27s standard—in which physical suffering...
This study examines the problem of religious and political obedience in early modern England. Drawin...
The institution of the family was integral to the identity of all women in Tudor England. Yet the fa...
This study will examine the complicated relationship between female religious expression and society...
This dissertation examines ideas about women and gender in the Protestant martyrology of sixteenth-c...
John Foxe\u27s The Book of Martyrs had enormous impact in Elizabethan England. His presentation of w...
John Foxe's Acts and Monuments provides us with more information about the female participants in th...
AbstractThis journal article is derived from my doctoral thesis undertaken at UEA Norwich, which pro...
We assert that Foxe’s Book of Martyrs was published for these three purposes: personal reasons, a tr...
During the reign of the Catholic Mary Tudor about 300 people were executed for their faith in Englan...
The fashioning of the female and of female conscience reveals that gender ideology served both churc...
With the Reformation the female centres of worship, such as convents and beguine communities, disapp...
This thesis examines laywomen’s responses to and participation in the early English Reformation, thr...
This dissertation assesses the religious and political roles and interpretations of martyrdom in Eng...
This paper examines the contesting histories of the sixteenth-century English Reformation produced d...
Late medieval devotional practice adapted the Roman martyr\u27s standard—in which physical suffering...
This study examines the problem of religious and political obedience in early modern England. Drawin...
The institution of the family was integral to the identity of all women in Tudor England. Yet the fa...
This study will examine the complicated relationship between female religious expression and society...
This dissertation examines ideas about women and gender in the Protestant martyrology of sixteenth-c...
John Foxe\u27s The Book of Martyrs had enormous impact in Elizabethan England. His presentation of w...
John Foxe's Acts and Monuments provides us with more information about the female participants in th...
AbstractThis journal article is derived from my doctoral thesis undertaken at UEA Norwich, which pro...
We assert that Foxe’s Book of Martyrs was published for these three purposes: personal reasons, a tr...
During the reign of the Catholic Mary Tudor about 300 people were executed for their faith in Englan...
The fashioning of the female and of female conscience reveals that gender ideology served both churc...
With the Reformation the female centres of worship, such as convents and beguine communities, disapp...
This thesis examines laywomen’s responses to and participation in the early English Reformation, thr...
This dissertation assesses the religious and political roles and interpretations of martyrdom in Eng...
This paper examines the contesting histories of the sixteenth-century English Reformation produced d...
Late medieval devotional practice adapted the Roman martyr\u27s standard—in which physical suffering...
This study examines the problem of religious and political obedience in early modern England. Drawin...
The institution of the family was integral to the identity of all women in Tudor England. Yet the fa...