This chapter considers how the English Reformation was, or, mostly, was not recalled in official liturgical documents. The first section surveys the evolution of calendars of saints from the 1530s to the version that became fixed in the Book of Common Prayer from 1562 onwards, which included a great many ancient and medieval commemorations but none from later than the thirteenth century, and cites alternative commemorative models which Tudor regimes could have embraced but chose not to. It then discusses why the Book of Common Prayer so pointedly ignored the upheavals of the Reformation, unlike the Scottish Book of Common Order, arguing that this reflects the need to unite a bitterly divided nation through ‘common prayer’ which was also an ...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on Aug. 25, 2010).The entire ...
The Roman Catholic Church, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, waa an international organizat...
From the beginning of the seventeenth century, Englishmen professed as Benedictine monks in mainland...
The Age of Reformation charts how religion, politics and social change were always intimately interl...
The assumed source of the annual early-modern English commemoration of Gunpowder treason day on 5 No...
Although the Protestant Reformation has traditionally been the focus of research on early modern Eng...
Traditional historiographies of the Reformation, seeing it as a unified, directed transition from Ca...
During the last decade of Henry VIII’s life, his Protestant subjects struggled to reconcile two loya...
This chapter explores the struggle that occurred in Interregnum England over the commemoration of th...
Previous scholarship has often employed the categories of ‘voluntary’ and ‘established’ religion whe...
At least thirty–eight memorials were erected to Elizabeth I in London parish churches between c. 160...
This dissertation argues that the Elizabethan settlement was a deliberate, self-conscious spiritual ...
This article examines the ways in which Thomas Becket was commemorated in books of hours (horae) of ...
Protestant and Catholic martyrologies evolved in dialogue; however, they did not articulate a common...
The Henrician Reformation 1534: Act of Supremacy, recognizing that Henry VIII is rightfully head of ...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on Aug. 25, 2010).The entire ...
The Roman Catholic Church, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, waa an international organizat...
From the beginning of the seventeenth century, Englishmen professed as Benedictine monks in mainland...
The Age of Reformation charts how religion, politics and social change were always intimately interl...
The assumed source of the annual early-modern English commemoration of Gunpowder treason day on 5 No...
Although the Protestant Reformation has traditionally been the focus of research on early modern Eng...
Traditional historiographies of the Reformation, seeing it as a unified, directed transition from Ca...
During the last decade of Henry VIII’s life, his Protestant subjects struggled to reconcile two loya...
This chapter explores the struggle that occurred in Interregnum England over the commemoration of th...
Previous scholarship has often employed the categories of ‘voluntary’ and ‘established’ religion whe...
At least thirty–eight memorials were erected to Elizabeth I in London parish churches between c. 160...
This dissertation argues that the Elizabethan settlement was a deliberate, self-conscious spiritual ...
This article examines the ways in which Thomas Becket was commemorated in books of hours (horae) of ...
Protestant and Catholic martyrologies evolved in dialogue; however, they did not articulate a common...
The Henrician Reformation 1534: Act of Supremacy, recognizing that Henry VIII is rightfully head of ...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on Aug. 25, 2010).The entire ...
The Roman Catholic Church, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, waa an international organizat...
From the beginning of the seventeenth century, Englishmen professed as Benedictine monks in mainland...