Image for The later Reformation in England, 1547-1603

The later Reformation in England, 1547-1603 (2nd ed)

Part of the British History in Perspective series
See all formats and editions

The English Reformation was the event which chiefly shaped English identity well into the 20th century.

It made the English kingdom a self consciously Protestant state, dominating the British Isles, and boasting an established Church which eventually developed a peculiar religious agenda, Anglicanism.

Although Henry VIII triggered a break with the Pope in his eccentric quest to rid himself of an inconveniently loyal wife, the Reformation soon slipped from his control, and in the reigns of his Tudor successors, it developed a momentum which made it one of the success stories of European Protestantism.This book discusses the developing Reformation in England through the later Tudor reigns: Edward VI, Mary I and Elizabeth I.

It provides a narrative of events, then discusses the ideas which shaped the English Reformation, and surveys the ways in which the English reacted to it, how far and quickly they accepted it, as well as assessing those who remained dissenters.

This new edition is fully updated to take account of new material in the field that has appeared since the 1990s.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Red Globe Press
0333921399 / 9780333921395
Paperback / softback
274.206
20/12/2000
United Kingdom
English
x, 173p.
22 cm
advanced secondary /general /undergraduate Learn More
Previous ed.: 1990.
Diarmaid MacCulloch's book "Thomas Cranmer: A Life" (1996) won the Whitbread Biography Prize, the James Tait Black Prize and the Duff Cooper Prize.