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Getting Along?

DOI link for Getting Along?

Getting Along? book

Religious Identities and Confessional Relations in Early Modern England - Essays in Honour of Professor W.J. Sheils

Getting Along?

DOI link for Getting Along?

Getting Along? book

Religious Identities and Confessional Relations in Early Modern England - Essays in Honour of Professor W.J. Sheils
ByAdam Morton
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2012
eBook Published 15 April 2016
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315584676
Pages 274 pages
eBook ISBN 9781315584676
SubjectsHumanities
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Lewycky, N. (Ed.), Morton, A. (2012). Getting Along?. London: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315584676

Examining the impact of the English and European Reformations on social interaction and community harmony, this volume simultaneously highlights the tension and degree of accommodation amongst ordinary people when faced with religious and social upheaval. Building on previous literature which has characterised the progress of the Reformation as 'slow' and 'piecemeal', this volume furthers our understanding of the process of negotiation at the most fundamental social and political levels - in the family, the household, and the parish. The essays further research in the field of religious toleration and social interaction in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries in both Britain and the wider European context. The contributors are amongst the leading researchers in the fields of religious toleration and denominational history, and their essays combine new archival research with current debates in the field. Additionally, the collection seeks to celebrate the career of Professor Bill Sheils, Head of the Department of History at the University of York, for his on-going contributions to historians' understanding of non-conformity (both Catholic and Protestant) in Reformation and post-Reformation England.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |28 pages

Introduction

ByAdam Morton, Nadine Lewycky

chapter 1|28 pages

Supping with Satan’s Disciples: Spiritual and Secular Sociability in Post-Reformation England

chapter 2|19 pages

Confessionalisation and Community in the Burial of English Catholics, c.1570–1700

chapter 3|21 pages

Fissures in the Bedrock: Parishes, Chapels, Parishioners and Chaplains in Pre-Reformation England

chapter 4|18 pages

Clergy, Laity and Ecclesiastical Discipline in Elizabethan Yorkshire Parishes

chapter 5|18 pages

Reading Libels in Early Seventeenth-Century Northamptonshire

chapter 6|20 pages

‘For the lacke of true history’: Polemic, Conversion and Church History in Elizabethan England

chapter 7|16 pages

Putting the Politics of Conscience on the Public Stage in

BySir John Oldcastle, part I

chapter 8|16 pages

‘When he was in France he was a Papist and when he was in England … he was a Protestant’: Negotiating Religious Identities in the Later Sixteenth Century

chapter 9|28 pages

A Yorkshireman in the Bastille: John Harwood and the Quaker Mission to Paris

chapter 10|24 pages

‘Papists of the New Model’: the English Mission and the Shadow of Blacklow

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