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From Cranmer to Sancroft Prof Patrick Collinson

From Cranmer to Sancroft By Prof Patrick Collinson

From Cranmer to Sancroft by Prof Patrick Collinson


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Summary

A collection of essays that covers topics ranging from Thomas Cranmer, who was burnt at the stake after repeated recantations in 1556, to William Sancroft, the only other post-Reformation archbishop of Canterbury to have been deprived of office. It explores the interactions between the inclusive and exclusive tendencies in English Protestantism.

From Cranmer to Sancroft Summary

From Cranmer to Sancroft: Essays on English Religion in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries by Prof Patrick Collinson

Patrick Collinson is the leading historian of English religion in the years after the Reformation. The topics covered by this collection of essays ranges from Thomas Cranmer, who was burnt at the stake after repeated recantations in 1556, to William Sancroft, the only other post-Reformation archbishop of Canterbury to have been deprived of office. Patrick Collinson's work explores the complex interactions between the inclusive and exclusive tendencies in English Protestantism, focusing both on famous figures, such as John Foxe and Richard Hooker, and on the individual reactions of lesser figures to the religious challenges of the time. Two themes throughout are the importance of the Bible and the emergence of Puritanism inside the Church of England.

From Cranmer to Sancroft Reviews

In Patrick Collinson's From Cranmer to Sancroft, two archbishops stand as stern-faced alpha and omega for a collection of essays written by the preeminent historian of early modern religion in England. Those clerical bookends are apt, for Collinson is interested in trajectories-in beginnings and perhaps, in the case of English Christianity, ends. John Bossy once famously wrote of Elizabethan Catholicism that it was a progress from inertia to inertia in three generations, and Collinson, in homage, states that Protestant dissent in early modern East Anglia travels full circle from minority enthusiasm to minority enthusiasm in five or six generations (p. 26); this volume, for its part, could be said to move from complex if weak archbishop to complex if weak archbishop, with a rich reserve of dissenters, separatists, and international Calvinists residing in between. -Sarah Covington, Catholic Historical Review, November 2008

About Prof Patrick Collinson

Patrick Collinson, Emeritus Regius Professor of Modern History at Cambridge, is the author of Godly People and The Religion of Protestants.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1 Thomas Cranmer and the Truth; 2 Godly Preachers and Zealous Magistrates in Elizabethan East Anglia: The Roots of Dissent; 3 Shepherds, Sheepdogs and Hirelings: The Pastoral Ministry in Post-Reformation England; 4 England and International Calvinism, 1558-1640; 5 The Puritan Character: Polemics and Polarities in Early Seventeenth-Century English Culture.

Additional information

NLS9781852855048
9781852855048
1852855045
From Cranmer to Sancroft: Essays on English Religion in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries by Prof Patrick Collinson
New
Paperback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2007-05-16
292
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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