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The gentlewoman's remembrance
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14 July 2016

HISTORY / Modern / 17th Century, History and Archaeology, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / General, General and world history, European history: medieval period, middle ages
‘This is chiefly a searching analysis of a single text, the long-forgotten spiritual autobiography of the Northamptonshire spinster Elizabeth Isham (1609-54), and the window it opens on to 17th-century familial and gender relations and the religious spectrum of the period. Almost erased from memory by the male members of her family and by later male custodians of the family archive, for whom singlehood was at best an embarrassment, Isham’s diary proves an immensely rewarding quarry for Stephens to mine. Its author, a ‘Puritan Nun’ and ‘Prayer Book Puritan’, compels historians to refine many accepted generalisations about women’s history and religious history and recognise that ‘exceptions’ were often the ‘norm’.’
R. C. Richardson, emeritus professor of history, University of Winchester, Times Higher Education – What are you reading? 16 November 2017
Introduction: Finding and remembering Elizabeth Isham
1. 'My Booke of Rememberance': the spiritual autobiography of Elizabeth Isham
2. 'As a Branch with a Roote': The Ishams of Lamport and their world
3. 'The Sweet Private Life': Singlehood in the patriarch's household
4. 'My Owne Books': Elizabeth Isham's reading
5. 'To Piety More Prone': Elizabeth Isham's religion
Conclusion: A memory restored
Index