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Gentry culture and the politics of religion
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12 June 2020

HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / Stuart Era (1603-1714), European history, HISTORY / Social History, RELIGION / Christianity / History, Politics and government
'It [Gentry Culture and the Politics of Religion] broadens our understanding of the ideology and material culture of the pre–Civil War gentry, and it shows how, even in counties with long efforts at consensus, tensions'
Journal of British Studies
Richard Cust is Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Birmingham
Peter Lake is Distinguished Professor of History at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee
Introduction
Part I: The Cheshire gentry and their world
1 The culture of dynasticism
2 The culture of the Cheshire gentleman
3 The governance of the shire
Part I conclusion
Part II: The Personal Rule and its problems
4 Cheshire politics in the 1620s and 1630s
5 Puritans and ecclesiastical government
Part II conclusion
Part III: The crisis, 1641–42
6 Petitioning and the search for settlement
7 The search for the centre as partisan enterprise?
8 Cheshire and the outbreak of civil war
Part III conclusion
Bibliography of manuscript sources
Index