Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-07T22:57:12.988Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The English Reformation Revisited

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

Felicity Heal
Affiliation:
Fellow and Tutor in Modern HistoryJesus College, Oxford
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

I was asked by the Society to provide an introduction to current historical thinking about the English Reformation in the first talk to the 1995 Conference. The ensuing lecture was deliberately intended to provide guidance through the minefield of controversy about the success of Reformation for those with only limited knowledge of sixteenth-century history. Debates about the Reformation have always been of obvious importance to both theologians and historians: they have usually in the past been profoundly influenced by confessional ideologies. In the last thirty years the nature of the questions asked about Reformation has undergone marked change: specifically the issue of popular religious belief and practice has assumed a centrality it never before possessed. But new questions have not brought closer agreement on the nature of religious change, and in recent years fierce debate has continued to rage on such issues as the vitality of late medieval Catholicism, the popularity of the early reformers and the motives of Henry VIII and his successors. Some, at least, of these controversies are still bound up with Protestant, Catholic and Anglican identities in the late twentieth century. Since the continuities between past and present were the theme of last year's Conference, I have touched on these identities, but have left it to others, especially Dr Rowell and Dr Rex to make these connections more explicit.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 1996

References

1 Foxe, John. Acts and Monuments ed. Pratt, J.. (8 vols. 1877). v. pp. 388–91.Google Scholar

2 Dickens, A. G.. The English Reformation 2nd ed. (1989)Google Scholar. Useful guidance on the bibliography of the English Reformation can be found in O'Day, R.. The Debate on the English Reformation (1986)Google Scholar. For discussion of more recent developments see Haigh, C. (editor) The English Reformation Revised (1988).Google Scholar

3 Marsh, C.. The Family of Low in English Society 1550–1630 (Cambridge. 1994)Google Scholar. Spufford, M. (ed.) The World of Rural Dissenters 1520–1725 (1995)Google Scholar. Pettegree, A. (ed.). The Reformation of the Parishes: the Ministry and the Reformation in Town and Country (Manchester. 1995)Google Scholar. Wright, S. (ed.). Parish. Church and People: Local Studies in Lay Religion. 1350–1750 (1988).Google Scholar

4 Scarisbrick, J. J.. The Reformation and the English People (Oxford. 1984)Google Scholar. Duffy, E.. The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England 1400–1580 (1992)Google Scholar. Rex, R.. Henry VIII and the English Reformation (1993).Google Scholar

5 Haigh, C.. English Reformations: Religion. Politics and Society under the Tudors (Oxford. 1993).Google Scholar

6 Harper-Bill, C.. The Pre-Reformation Church in England: 1400–1530 (1988)Google Scholar. Thomson, J. A. F.. The Early Tudor Church and Society: 1485–1529 (1994)Google Scholar. Swanson, R. N.. Church and Society in Late Medieval England (Oxford. 1989).Google Scholar

7 Trueman, C.. Luther's Legacy: Salvation and the English Reformers (Oxford. 1994).CrossRefGoogle Scholar For essays on the British context of religious change see Ellis, S. and Barber, S. (eds.) Conquest and Union: Fashioning a British State (1995).Google Scholar

8 Redworth, G.. In Defence of the Church Catholic: the Life of Stephen Gardiner (Oxford. 1990). pp. 176207.Google ScholarMacCulloch, D.. The Later Reformation in England: 1547–1603 (1990).Google Scholar

9 Aston, M.. England's Iconoclasts: Laws against Images (Oxford. 1988)Google Scholar and The King's Bedpost: Reformation and Iconography in a Tudor Group Portrait (Cambridge. 1993).Google Scholar

10 Morison, Richard, An Invective against the great and detestable vice of treason (1539), fo. 5a.Google Scholar

11 There are discussions of the application of ideas of Old Testament kingship in King, J. N., Tudor Roval Iconography (Princeton, 1989), pp. 54 ffGoogle Scholar. and in Rex, , Henry VIII, pp. 104–105.Google Scholar