In eighteenth-century law and print, English Catholics were portrayed as entirely untrustworthy, and their exclusion from all aspects of English society encouraged. Yet, as many local studies have shown, there were many individual instances of relatively peaceful coexistence between Protestants and Catholics in this period. This article explores why this was the case by examining how Catholics overcame labels of untrustworthiness on a local level. Using the remarkable political influence of one high-status Catholic in the first half of the eighteenth century as a case study, it questions the utility of “pragmatism” as an explanation for instances of relatively peaceful coexistence in this period. Instead it focuses on the role that delibera...
Loyal Protestants and Dangerous Papists analyzes the vibrant and often violent political culture of ...
This dissertation is a work of political and social , as well as ecclesiastical, history, a contrib...
By 1660, the Common Law was widely, if not universally, applied in Ireland. For the English and Pro...
Explanations of local interconfessional relations in post-revolutionary England tend to highlight th...
This article examines how political, theological and cultural factors formed confessional identity i...
This thesis examines several aspects of the enforcement of conformity to the religious and political...
Historians have traditionally viewed the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as periods of decline ...
This thesis explores the responses of different groups within the English Catholic community to the ...
This article explores the development of Elizabethan Catholicism, challenging historical divisions b...
This study examines the problem of religious and political obedience in early modern England. Drawin...
What did it mean to be a Catholic elite in Protestant England? The relationship between the Protesta...
In eighteenth-century, Britain was experiencing success in international arena, increase in economic...
The eighteenth century in England has long been associated with increasing consumption, trade, luxur...
Networks of affinity and clientage were common features of aristocratic life in early modern Europe....
Loyal Protestants and Dangerous Papists analyzes the vibrant and often violent political culture of ...
Loyal Protestants and Dangerous Papists analyzes the vibrant and often violent political culture of ...
This dissertation is a work of political and social , as well as ecclesiastical, history, a contrib...
By 1660, the Common Law was widely, if not universally, applied in Ireland. For the English and Pro...
Explanations of local interconfessional relations in post-revolutionary England tend to highlight th...
This article examines how political, theological and cultural factors formed confessional identity i...
This thesis examines several aspects of the enforcement of conformity to the religious and political...
Historians have traditionally viewed the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as periods of decline ...
This thesis explores the responses of different groups within the English Catholic community to the ...
This article explores the development of Elizabethan Catholicism, challenging historical divisions b...
This study examines the problem of religious and political obedience in early modern England. Drawin...
What did it mean to be a Catholic elite in Protestant England? The relationship between the Protesta...
In eighteenth-century, Britain was experiencing success in international arena, increase in economic...
The eighteenth century in England has long been associated with increasing consumption, trade, luxur...
Networks of affinity and clientage were common features of aristocratic life in early modern Europe....
Loyal Protestants and Dangerous Papists analyzes the vibrant and often violent political culture of ...
Loyal Protestants and Dangerous Papists analyzes the vibrant and often violent political culture of ...
This dissertation is a work of political and social , as well as ecclesiastical, history, a contrib...
By 1660, the Common Law was widely, if not universally, applied in Ireland. For the English and Pro...