This dissertation argues that the Elizabethan settlement was a deliberate, self-conscious spiritual reformation, inaugurated and nurtured from above by Elizabeth I in public and private devotional works put forth by royal authority, and taken up and advanced from below in influential books of public prayer published by long-term English evangelicals. This spiritual reformation offered a balance of continuity and change, of tradition and reform, intentionally designed to provide for the devotional needs of English Christians of divergent spiritual identities and confessional commitments. Responding to longstanding historiographical debates over the English Reformation as either a political reformation “from above” or a popular reformation ...
This thesis is concerned with the pace of religious change in the town of Ipswich in the period 1520...
This is the first attempt to provide a detailed description of the different types of devotional lit...
Study of Elizabeth I of England\u27s political motivations for reforming the 16th century Anglican C...
This dissertation pursues readings of English Renaissance texts through the lens of three separate b...
The Roman Catholic Church, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, waa an international organizat...
The Reformation was perhaps one of the most important socio-religious changes to occur in history. T...
This thesis examines laywomen’s responses to and participation in the early English Reformation, thr...
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of the Midlands counties during the reign of Eliza...
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of Warwickshire during the reign of Elizabeth I (1...
This thesis investigates popular religion in Essex during the English Reformation, and it assesses w...
This thesis outlines two distinct modes of early sixteenth-century devotional practice (image-based...
This thesis is a study of the religious culture of the market-town parish of Wimborne Minster, Dorse...
This thesis examines the subject of popular belief and how devotional life was expressed by parishio...
This dissertation examines the impact and influence of a portion of the early modern Jesuit seminary...
This study seeks to trace the development of English Protestant literature from the time when evang...
This thesis is concerned with the pace of religious change in the town of Ipswich in the period 1520...
This is the first attempt to provide a detailed description of the different types of devotional lit...
Study of Elizabeth I of England\u27s political motivations for reforming the 16th century Anglican C...
This dissertation pursues readings of English Renaissance texts through the lens of three separate b...
The Roman Catholic Church, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, waa an international organizat...
The Reformation was perhaps one of the most important socio-religious changes to occur in history. T...
This thesis examines laywomen’s responses to and participation in the early English Reformation, thr...
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of the Midlands counties during the reign of Eliza...
This dissertation examines the Catholic community of Warwickshire during the reign of Elizabeth I (1...
This thesis investigates popular religion in Essex during the English Reformation, and it assesses w...
This thesis outlines two distinct modes of early sixteenth-century devotional practice (image-based...
This thesis is a study of the religious culture of the market-town parish of Wimborne Minster, Dorse...
This thesis examines the subject of popular belief and how devotional life was expressed by parishio...
This dissertation examines the impact and influence of a portion of the early modern Jesuit seminary...
This study seeks to trace the development of English Protestant literature from the time when evang...
This thesis is concerned with the pace of religious change in the town of Ipswich in the period 1520...
This is the first attempt to provide a detailed description of the different types of devotional lit...
Study of Elizabeth I of England\u27s political motivations for reforming the 16th century Anglican C...