ABSTRACT

Thomas Anthony Birrell (1924–2011) was a man of many parts. For most of his working life he was Professor of English and American Literature in the University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands, where he was famous for his lively, humoristic and thought-provoking lectures. He was the author of some very popular surveys of English Literature in Dutch, but – first and foremost – he was a bibliographer and a historian.

His scholarly oeuvre is extensive and includes such highlights as English Monarchs and their Books (London 1986), a study of the Old Royal Library. However, many of his publications are hidden in occasional publications, periodicals and introductions to books no longer in print. That is why a – posthumous – selection of his bibliographical essays appeared in 2013, entitled Aspects of Book Culture (Ashgate 2013), and that is why it was decided to bring out a companion volume containing a selection of his essays in the field of recusant history.

The present edition contains fourteen of Birrell’s articles published between 1950 and 2006. They all demonstrate his bibliographical expertise, his in-depth knowledge of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century English Catholic history and his absolute determination to examine every scrap of archival material that might shed light on the episodes he was investigating. But, perhaps most important of all, he combined his scholarship with an intense interest in the individual lives that shape and are shaped by history, so the lasting impression that these articles will make is the sense of getting close to a whole series of personalities caught up in the turmoil of their time.

Aspects of Recusant History was edited by Jos Blom, Frans Korsten and Frans Blom, all three former students of Tom Birrell and, both individually and collectively, authors and editors of a whole range of important book historical publications. (CS1092).

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|17 pages

Catholic Allegiance and the Popish Plot

A study of some Catholic writers of the Restoration period*

chapter 2|17 pages

Non-Catholic Writers and Catholic Emancipation

An aspect of Sidney Smith, Shelley, Coleridge and Cobbett*

chapter 8|55 pages

English Catholic Mystics in Non-Catholic Circles

The taste for Middle English mystical literature and its derivatives from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries*

chapter 9|4 pages

Recusant Historiography

An historian looks at the achievements of 25 years’ study of recusancy*

chapter 11|11 pages

John Brown, Scottish Minim (1569–1643)

A tale of three title pages*

chapter 13|5 pages

Review of Paul Arblaster, Antwerp & the World

Richard Verstegan and the International Culture of Catholic Reformation (Leuven University Press 2004)*

chapter 14|22 pages

William Carter (C. 1549–84)

Recusant printer, publisher, binder, stationer, scribe – and martyr*