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by Patrick Collinson

ePub This England: Essays on the English Nation and Commonwealth in the Sixteenth Century download
Author:
Patrick Collinson
ISBN13:
978-0719084423
ISBN:
0719084423
Language:
Publisher:
Manchester University Press; 1 edition (November 15, 2011)
Category:
Subcategory:
Europe
ePub file:
1940 kb
Fb2 file:
1842 kb
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Rating:
4.5
Votes:
927

This England is a celebration of 'Englishness' in the sixteenth century, and.

This England is a celebration of 'Englishness' in the sixteenth century, and. By the time of his retirement in 1996, he was one of the doyens of English Reformation history. His short summation of the period, The Reformation, was published in 2003. Collinson's work laid the foundations, in many ways, for what historians of the English Reformation currently term the 'Calvinist Consensus' in the latter decades of the sixteenth and reign of James I/VI.

Series: Politics, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain.

This England This England is a celebration of 'Englishness' in the sixteenth century, and examines the growing .

Patrick Collinson, Peter Lake, Anthony Milton. Patrick Collinson was one of Britain's foremost early modern historians. This England is a celebration of 'Englishness' in the sixteenth century.

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Essays on the English Nation and Commonwealth in the Sixteenth Century. A celebration of Englishness in the sixteenth century. Shipped in 8 to 10 working days. Appeals equally to students of early modern history and its literary culture, presenting a view of 'Tudor England' and offering a firmer historical background to evaluating the English Renaissance. -.

Authors: Collinson, Patrick, Murphy, Enda. This book investigates further implications of the transformative religious changes of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries for the nation, the town, the family, and for their culture. price for USA in USD (gross). Show all. Table of contents (5 chapters). The Protestant Nation. The Protestant Family. Pages 63. Collinson, Patrick. Protestant Culture and the Cultural Revolution.

Patrick "Pat" Collinson CBE (10 August 1929 – 28 September 2011) was an English historian, known as a writer on the Elizabethan era, particularly Elizabethan Puritanism. He was emeritus Regius Professor of Modern History, University of Cambridge, having occupied the chair from 1988 to 1996. He once described himself as "an early modernist with a prime interest in the history of England in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

This volume collects and revises a series of articles by Patrick Collinson, which were first published between 1994 and 2009.

CollinsonPatrick, ed. The Sixteenth Century 1485-1603

CollinsonPatrick, ed. The Sixteenth Century 1485-1603. The Short Oxford History of the British Isles. New York: Oxford University Press. Volume 35 Issue 3 - Joseph S. Block. Exploring Russia in the Elizabethan Commonwealth tells the story of English relations with Russia, from the 'strange and wonderfull discoverie' of the land and Elizabeth I's correspondence with Ivan the Terrible, to the corruption of the Muscovy Company and the Elizabethan regime's censorship of politically sensitive representations of Russia.

This England is a celebration of "Englishness" in the sixteenth century, which explores: the growing conviction of "Englishness" through the rapidly developing English language; the reinforcement of cultural nationalism as a result of the Protestant Reformation; the national and international situation of England at a time of acute national catastrophe; and of Queen Elizabeth I, the last of her line, remaining unmarried, refusing to even discuss the succession to her throne.  Introducing students of the period to an aspect of history largely neglected in the current vogue for histories of the Tudors, Collinson investigates the rising role of English, of England’s God-centerdness, before focusing on the role of Elizabethans as citizens rather than mere subjects. It  responds to a demand for a history which is no less social than political, investigates what it meant to be a citizen of England, living through the 1570s and 1580s.