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Reformers and the Church of England under Elizabeth I and the Early Stuarts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 March 2011
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During the past forty years, the religious history of Elizabethan and early Stuart England has received a great deal of attention from intellectual, social and Church historians. Because of the nature of the general interpretation traditionally followed, most scholars have found it fruitful to concentrate their research upon particular groups or individuals and to fit the ensuing studies into either a rather narrow stream labelled ‘Anglican’ or a very broad one named ‘Puritan’. While the number of biographies of English bishops and analyses of ‘Anglican’ divines has increased at a more than respectable rate recently, studies of English ‘Puritans’ and their brethren in New England have grown to almost unmanageable proportions. With all of these riches at hand, however, no recent historian has published an overall synthetic history of the Church of England under Elizabeth and the early Stuarts to match that completed by W. H. Frere more than two-thirds of a century ago. Indeed, a good deal of controversy still ranges over the boundaries and validity of such terms as ‘Anglican’ and—especially— ‘Puritan’. Plunging into that dispute, this paper will examine the nature and historiographical origins of these categories, redefine them so that they better apply to the evidence from the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries and spell out some of the social and political implications that spring from this modified point of view. While the argument presented here, no doubt, will neither please nor satisfy all historians working in the field, one hopes that it will provide some with a glimpse at the outlines of a new synthesis.
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References
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49 See Christianson, Hejormers and Babylon, th 4 & 5; and Lamont. Marginal Prynne, ch. 3 &: 4. The present article derives from a paper delivered at a joint session of the American Historical Association and the American Society of Church History held in 1977. Since then it has undergone much revision and expansion. Of the many colleagues and friends who have read and commented upon various dralts of the paper, I would like to thank Dr Leland Carlson. Dr Caroline Hibbard, Mr Conrad Russell. Dr Paul Seaver, and Drjames Stayer lor their comments and help; the errors that remain are mine.
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