When England’s only Bridgettine monastic community was dispersed after the suppression of Syon Abbey in late 1539, various groups of religious, both male and female, sought to continue their regular life in small household-based secular communities that eventually united to form the restored Syon Abbey under Mary Tudor’s patronage in 1556. The most important of these households was that of the former abbess, Agnes Jordan, which established itself at ‘Southlands’ near Denham in Buckinghamshire very soon after the dissolution. It was this group of religious that later went into exile on the continent in 1550 and ultimately formed the nucleus of the Marian refoundation. Little is known, however, about the day-to-day life of this household or h...
This thesis addresses the communities of English women religious founded after the Reformation on th...
At the time of its suppression in 1539, Syon Abbey was one of the most generously endowed monasterie...
A case study of the priories of Boxgrove, Folkestone and Horsham shows how the 1536 closures under H...
The Gilbertine order was unusual in that it was founded for both men and women who\ud lived in adjac...
Of the thousands of monastic houses that once dominated the religious landscape of medieval England,...
On the eve of the Reformation, was traditional religion on the decline? During the last four decad...
In 1415, King Henry V established the Monastery of Saint Savior, Saint Mary, and Saint Bridget of Sy...
Eileen Power’s work on medieval English nunneries laid the foundation for modern scholarship. This p...
The Reformation in England dramatically changed the physical characteristics of parish churches with...
Between 1536 and 1541, Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries in England and ended a religious way of ...
English women religious were part of consistently changing, reforming and vibrant communities. The c...
Topics addressed in this thesis include the dynamic monastic religion characteristic of certain orde...
The thesis follows the stages of the Reformation from the late-medieval Church to the Elizabethan Ch...
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of the Midlands counties during the reign of Eliza...
The dissolution of the monasteries in England (1536–1540) forced hundreds of former inmate...
This thesis addresses the communities of English women religious founded after the Reformation on th...
At the time of its suppression in 1539, Syon Abbey was one of the most generously endowed monasterie...
A case study of the priories of Boxgrove, Folkestone and Horsham shows how the 1536 closures under H...
The Gilbertine order was unusual in that it was founded for both men and women who\ud lived in adjac...
Of the thousands of monastic houses that once dominated the religious landscape of medieval England,...
On the eve of the Reformation, was traditional religion on the decline? During the last four decad...
In 1415, King Henry V established the Monastery of Saint Savior, Saint Mary, and Saint Bridget of Sy...
Eileen Power’s work on medieval English nunneries laid the foundation for modern scholarship. This p...
The Reformation in England dramatically changed the physical characteristics of parish churches with...
Between 1536 and 1541, Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries in England and ended a religious way of ...
English women religious were part of consistently changing, reforming and vibrant communities. The c...
Topics addressed in this thesis include the dynamic monastic religion characteristic of certain orde...
The thesis follows the stages of the Reformation from the late-medieval Church to the Elizabethan Ch...
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of the Midlands counties during the reign of Eliza...
The dissolution of the monasteries in England (1536–1540) forced hundreds of former inmate...
This thesis addresses the communities of English women religious founded after the Reformation on th...
At the time of its suppression in 1539, Syon Abbey was one of the most generously endowed monasterie...
A case study of the priories of Boxgrove, Folkestone and Horsham shows how the 1536 closures under H...