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Look Inside Annals of the Reformation and Establishment of Religion

Annals of the Reformation and Establishment of Religion
And Other Various Occurrences in the Church of England, during Queen Elizabeth’s Happy Reign

Volume 2

Part 1

£41.99

Part of Cambridge Library Collection - British and Irish History, 15th & 16th Centuries

  • Date Published: December 2010
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9781108018005

£ 41.99
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About the Authors
  • The English ecclesiastical historian John Strype (1643–1737) published the second volume of his monumental Elizabethan religious history Annals of the Reformation in 1725. For over two and a half centuries it remained one of the most important Protestant histories of the period and has been reprinted in numerous editions. Volume 2 Part 1 covers the years 1570 to 1575. It focuses on the Queen's use of parliament; royal relations with the episcopate and nobility; various ecclesiastical commissions; threats from Rome; religious polemics; difficulties with Mary Queen of Scots; diplomacy with Spain, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Scotland; the pressures on the Queen to marry and the printing of the Bishop's Bible. Strype's thorough use of primary sources and the enormous scope and detail of his history has ensured its place as an outstanding work of eighteenth-century scholarship. It should be read by every student of Elizabethan religious history.

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    Product details

    • Date Published: December 2010
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9781108018005
    • length: 612 pages
    • dimensions: 216 x 140 x 31 mm
    • weight: 0.7kg
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Preface
    1. A testimonial from some in the university of Cambridge concerning Cartwright's reading
    2. A determination of the general assembly of the church of Scotland, for obedience to the new king
    3. Orders and injunctions for preventing frays and fightings in London
    4. Motions and letters concerning the queen's marrying with Duke d'Anjou
    5. Scottish affairs
    6. Amity judged more advisable with France than Spain
    7. A parliament
    8. A convocation
    9. The duke of Norfolk unhappily engaged with the Scottish queen
    10. The present concerns of the nation for the queen's safety
    11. Zanchy writes to the queen concerning the habits
    12. Campion, the Jesuit, persuades the bishop of Gloucester to renounce his religion
    13. The queen's progress this year
    14. A new parliament
    15. The thoughts of the wisest men concerning the state, by reason of the Scottish queen
    16. A league offensive and defensive with France
    17. The massacre at Paris
    18. The motion renewed for the marriage
    19. The earl of Worcester goes into France to assist at the christening of the French king's daughters
    20. A libel printed in France against the state of England
    21. A sermon preached by Cooper, bishop of Lincoln, at Paul's Cross, in vindication of the church of England and its liturgy
    22. Serious deliberation about a reformation of divers things in church and state
    23. The Great English Bible, called, The Bishops' Bible, printed
    24. Walsingham, the queen's ambassador in France, impoverished in his embassy, comes home
    25. Remarks upon particular men
    26. Dr. Valentine Dale goes ambassador to France: the condition of Rochel
    27. Foreign popish princes conspire to invade England
    28. Chief puritans
    29. The privy council warns those of the Dutch church against receiving any puritans
    30. Pilkington, bishop of Durham, desires the queen's leave to come up this winter
    31. Bullinger and Gualter, their judgments of the new discipline
    32. Many papists set at liberty upon sureties
    33. Bishop Parkhurst's regulation of abuses in his registers
    34. A parliament, and convocation
    35. St. John's college in Cambridge in disorder
    36. The Lord Treasurer suspected by the queen to favour the queen of Scots.

  • Author

    John Strype

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