ABSTRACT

This significant and innovative collection explores the changing piety of townspeople and villagers before, during and after the Reformation. It brings together leading and new scholars from England and the Netherlands to present new research on a subject of importance to historians of society and religion in late medieval and early modern Europe. Contributors examine the diverse evidence for transitions in piety and the processes of these changes. The volume incorporates a range of approaches including social, cultural and religious history, literary and manuscript studies, social anthropology and archaeology. This is, therefore, an interdisciplinary volume that constitutes a cultural history of changing pieties in the period c. 1400-1640. Contributors focus on a number of specific themes using a range of types of evidence and theoretical approaches. Some chapters make detailed reconstructions of specific communities, groups and individuals; some offer perceptive and useful analyses of theoretical and comparative approaches to transition and to piety; and others closely examine cultural practices, ideas and tastes. Through this range of detailed work, which brings to light previously unknown sources as well as new approaches to more familiar sources, contributors address a number of questions arising from recent published work on late medieval and early modern piety and reformation. Individually and collectively, the chapters in this volume offer an important contribution to the field of late medieval and early modern piety. They highlight, for the first time, the centrality of processes of transition in the experience and practice of religion. Offering a refreshingly new approach to the subject, this volume raises timely theoretical and methodological questions that will be of interest to a broad audience.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part |48 pages

Orthodoxies and Heterodoxies

chapter 1|30 pages

Geographies and Materialities of Piety

11Reconciling Competing Narratives of Religious Change in Pre-Reformation and Reformation England

chapter 2|16 pages

Martyrs of the Marsh

Elizabeth Barton, Joan Bocher and Trajectories of Martyrdom in Reformation Kent Andrew Hope

part |70 pages

Institutions as Evidence for Transitions in Piety

part |54 pages

Reading and Representation

chapter 7|17 pages

‘Some Tomb for a Remembraunce’

129Representations of Piety in Post-Reformation Gentry Funeral Monuments

chapter 8|18 pages

‘The Dayes Moralised’

Reconstructing Devotional Reading, c. 1450–1560

chapter 9|18 pages

Writing and Silence

Transitions Between the Contemplative and the Active Life

chapter |10 pages

Afterword