This article contributes to a body of work exploring the possibilities of a popular politics in Ireland before the rising of 1641. It does so by revisiting the ‘recusancy revolt’ of 1603 in which, in the interregnum created by Elizabeth I's death, churches and civic space in towns in the south and west of Ireland were reoccupied for Catholic worship. Reading for meaning in the shaping and timing of the crowd rituals at the heart of the protest, the article argues that Old English elites and people physically acted out the recovery of these spaces for the public performance of a civic Catholicism, in which corporate worship was integral both to the maintenance of the civic order and to the defence of ancient liberties and freedoms against th...
The reign of Henry VIII was a watershed in Irish history. Historians, however, have underestimated t...
The English invasion of Ireland is of central importance to the interconnected histories of Britain ...
Despite the involvement of radical socialists like James Connolly and the Irish Citizen Army in the ...
This article offers a critical analysis of the representation of early modern popular violence provi...
Between 1641 and 1652, Ireland was ravaged by war and monarchy was replaced by the Cromwellian Commo...
This article seeks to explore the wide range of Irish Catholic political thinking in the early moder...
This essay focuses on the changes in English rhetoric concerning Irish Catholicism from 1578-1610. A...
The Irish Rebellion of 1641 is particularly vital to understanding the political, religious, and soc...
Following the English invasion of Scotland in July 1650, ministers and laymen in the Church of Scotl...
Recent historiography on the Elizabethan regime has argued that it was strongly dominated by convinc...
This article examines popular political participation in early modern Scotland. In Scotland, some of...
There are few periods in the history of any nation as tumultuous as the late-sixteenth and early-sev...
Although the Protestant Reformation has traditionally been the focus of research on early modern Eng...
This article explores how the Elizabethan religious settlement of 1559 was experienced at parish lev...
This article seeks to identify a vein of ‘Puritanism’ running through orthodox religious culture in ...
The reign of Henry VIII was a watershed in Irish history. Historians, however, have underestimated t...
The English invasion of Ireland is of central importance to the interconnected histories of Britain ...
Despite the involvement of radical socialists like James Connolly and the Irish Citizen Army in the ...
This article offers a critical analysis of the representation of early modern popular violence provi...
Between 1641 and 1652, Ireland was ravaged by war and monarchy was replaced by the Cromwellian Commo...
This article seeks to explore the wide range of Irish Catholic political thinking in the early moder...
This essay focuses on the changes in English rhetoric concerning Irish Catholicism from 1578-1610. A...
The Irish Rebellion of 1641 is particularly vital to understanding the political, religious, and soc...
Following the English invasion of Scotland in July 1650, ministers and laymen in the Church of Scotl...
Recent historiography on the Elizabethan regime has argued that it was strongly dominated by convinc...
This article examines popular political participation in early modern Scotland. In Scotland, some of...
There are few periods in the history of any nation as tumultuous as the late-sixteenth and early-sev...
Although the Protestant Reformation has traditionally been the focus of research on early modern Eng...
This article explores how the Elizabethan religious settlement of 1559 was experienced at parish lev...
This article seeks to identify a vein of ‘Puritanism’ running through orthodox religious culture in ...
The reign of Henry VIII was a watershed in Irish history. Historians, however, have underestimated t...
The English invasion of Ireland is of central importance to the interconnected histories of Britain ...
Despite the involvement of radical socialists like James Connolly and the Irish Citizen Army in the ...