The leading Puritan divine, Richard Baxter (1615-1691), left behind a complex range of manuscripts at his death. Preparatory work for the forthcoming Oxford University Press editions of his autobiography, Reliquiæ Baxterianæ, and of his complete correspondence has uncovered a lacuna in this manuscript collection and its subsequent cataloguing. This has implications for our understanding of Baxter’s manuscript legacy, his intellectual interests, and his writing and publishing practices in the final decades of his life. It also provides a glimpse into authorial and press practice in the late seventeenth century, enriching our understanding of book history and the relationship between manuscript and print at that time
This article discusses the presentation copies of two sixteenth-century works, Martin Bucer’s De reg...
Scholars have long observed that the Catholic libel known as Leicester’s Commonwealth circulated ext...
This study proposes that the emergence of the concept of privacy as a personal right, as the very co...
The leading Puritan divine, Richard Baxter (1615-1691), left behind a complex range of manuscripts a...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham’s Libra...
Richard Baxter, one of the most famous Puritans of the seventeenth century, is generally known as a ...
A ledger in the Norfolk Record Office records the activities of William Proctor, a wealthy London st...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham's Libra...
My research has yielded publications that contribute to the field of printing history through the fi...
The antiquarian Joseph Holland (d. 1605) owned a large, but damaged, Chaucerian manuscript from the ...
A Holy Commonwealth was written in 1659 by the Puritan minister Richard Baxter (1615–91), and proved...
The Tudor period saw a revolution in antiquarian histories of Britain. Their networks of transmissio...
THE library of Thomas Cranmer (1489-1556), though now widely dispersed, is a significant component o...
In 1629, Thomas and John Buck, Cambridge University Press printers, published three texts—the Book o...
This thesis is about networks in seventeenth-century England: the making and re-shaping of networks ...
This article discusses the presentation copies of two sixteenth-century works, Martin Bucer’s De reg...
Scholars have long observed that the Catholic libel known as Leicester’s Commonwealth circulated ext...
This study proposes that the emergence of the concept of privacy as a personal right, as the very co...
The leading Puritan divine, Richard Baxter (1615-1691), left behind a complex range of manuscripts a...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham’s Libra...
Richard Baxter, one of the most famous Puritans of the seventeenth century, is generally known as a ...
A ledger in the Norfolk Record Office records the activities of William Proctor, a wealthy London st...
This thesis presents a series of studies in early modern manuscript culture based on Chetham's Libra...
My research has yielded publications that contribute to the field of printing history through the fi...
The antiquarian Joseph Holland (d. 1605) owned a large, but damaged, Chaucerian manuscript from the ...
A Holy Commonwealth was written in 1659 by the Puritan minister Richard Baxter (1615–91), and proved...
The Tudor period saw a revolution in antiquarian histories of Britain. Their networks of transmissio...
THE library of Thomas Cranmer (1489-1556), though now widely dispersed, is a significant component o...
In 1629, Thomas and John Buck, Cambridge University Press printers, published three texts—the Book o...
This thesis is about networks in seventeenth-century England: the making and re-shaping of networks ...
This article discusses the presentation copies of two sixteenth-century works, Martin Bucer’s De reg...
Scholars have long observed that the Catholic libel known as Leicester’s Commonwealth circulated ext...
This study proposes that the emergence of the concept of privacy as a personal right, as the very co...