This thesis reasserts Alexander Henderson’s prominent place as the leading clerical spokesman for the Scottish Covenanters during the British Revolutions (1637-1646). Older biographies were hagiographical, portraying Henderson as a hero in the cause of liberty. Recent scholarly works on the Covenanter movement have often failed to do justice to its clerical leaders and their religious ideas. This thesis aims to correct both. Focusing on covenanting, preaching, ecclesiology and pamphleteering it reassesses Henderson’s public leadership especially in regard to the central role of religion. This thesis outlines Henderson’s various means of public communication, his self-fashioning as a leader, and how he was effective as a public figure in ear...
This thesis examines the life and work of Thomas Gillespie and the origins of the Relief Church in ...
What did it mean to be a Covenanter? From its first subscription in 1638, the National Covenant w...
Until quite recently it has been argued that the Scottish Reformation of 1560 removed the trappings ...
This thesis reasserts Alexander Henderson’s prominent place as the leading clerical spokesman for th...
This paper examines aspects of the attempts of the Covenanting movement to establish a godly society...
This thesis examines the interplay of propaganda, politics and religion as it relates to the covenan...
As one of the most remarkable of the Scottish Covenanters, George Gillespie had a reputation in Engl...
This thesis offers a new interpretation of the origins of eighteenth-century popular political consc...
The Scottish Covenanting Movement can be viewed as a reaction to the absentee monarchy of Charles I ...
Historically Oliver Cromwell's 1650 invasion of Scotland and the subsequent decade long occupation ...
This article examines the swearing of collective religious covenants in early modern Scotland. Scotl...
This thesis tackles Presbyterian Church government and the Covenanted interest during the Commonweal...
In 1649 a radical faction of Covenanters seized power in Scotland. Upheld by supporters as the zenit...
This dissertation examines the rebellion of the Lords of the Congregation, who aimed to establish Pr...
The Irish rebellion of October 1641 drove large numbers of clerical migrants across the Irish Sea to...
This thesis examines the life and work of Thomas Gillespie and the origins of the Relief Church in ...
What did it mean to be a Covenanter? From its first subscription in 1638, the National Covenant w...
Until quite recently it has been argued that the Scottish Reformation of 1560 removed the trappings ...
This thesis reasserts Alexander Henderson’s prominent place as the leading clerical spokesman for th...
This paper examines aspects of the attempts of the Covenanting movement to establish a godly society...
This thesis examines the interplay of propaganda, politics and religion as it relates to the covenan...
As one of the most remarkable of the Scottish Covenanters, George Gillespie had a reputation in Engl...
This thesis offers a new interpretation of the origins of eighteenth-century popular political consc...
The Scottish Covenanting Movement can be viewed as a reaction to the absentee monarchy of Charles I ...
Historically Oliver Cromwell's 1650 invasion of Scotland and the subsequent decade long occupation ...
This article examines the swearing of collective religious covenants in early modern Scotland. Scotl...
This thesis tackles Presbyterian Church government and the Covenanted interest during the Commonweal...
In 1649 a radical faction of Covenanters seized power in Scotland. Upheld by supporters as the zenit...
This dissertation examines the rebellion of the Lords of the Congregation, who aimed to establish Pr...
The Irish rebellion of October 1641 drove large numbers of clerical migrants across the Irish Sea to...
This thesis examines the life and work of Thomas Gillespie and the origins of the Relief Church in ...
What did it mean to be a Covenanter? From its first subscription in 1638, the National Covenant w...
Until quite recently it has been argued that the Scottish Reformation of 1560 removed the trappings ...