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Political and religious practice in the early modern British world
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07 June 2022

HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / Stuart Era (1603-1714), History: theory and methods, HISTORY / Historiography, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / Tudor & Elizabethan Era (1485-1603), History
'Bulman and Domínguez have put together a collection that will serve as a basis for deeper reflection on the importance of practices during the early modern period. Historians will find much of value in this volume.'
Journal of Modern History
William J. Bulman is Professor of History at Lehigh University
Freddy C. Domínguez is Associate Professor of History at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
Introduction: post-revisionism and the history of practices in the early modern British world – William J. Bulman
Part I: Political and religious practices
1 Stealing bibles in early modern London – Ethan H. Shagan
2 Printed English-language bible concordances to c. 1640 and intentions for lay bible use – Amy G. Tan
3 In the company of merchants: Edward Sherburne, the East India Company, and the transformation of Stuart political practices – Rupali Mishra
4 Consensual conflict in the early Stuart House of Commons – William J. Bulman
5 John Hacket’s Scrinia Reserata and the oral history of early Stuart England – Noah Millstone
6 ‘Man of moderation’: the Restoration bishop of Norwich – Isaac Stephens
7 Hoadly the high and Sacheverell the low: religious and political celebrity in post-revolutionary England – Brian Cowan
Part II: British, European, and Atlantic dimensions
8 The Nine Years’ War in Ireland (1594–1603) as problem of government – Brendan Kane
9 Luisa de Carvajal, her ‘Life’, and the place of women in counter-reformation politics –
Freddy C. Domínguez
10 Of gods and beasts: the many bodies of James VI and I – Alastair Bellany
11 Empire of heresy: Samuel Gorton, Gerrard Winstanley, and the London roots of trans-Atlantic revolutionary religion – David R. Como
Index