Annals of the Reformation and Establishment of Religion
The ecclesiastical historian John Strype (1643–1737) published the first volume of his monumental Elizabethan history Annals of the Reformation in 1709. For over two and a half centuries it has remained one of the most important Protestant histories of the period and has been reprinted in numerous editions. Volume 1 Part 2 focuses on the years 1563–1569. It covers the Queen's relationship with the episcopate; the publication of the Bible in Welsh; diplomatic relations with Scotland and France; relations with Rome and English responses to the Council of Trent; the Queen's possible suitors; and religious polemics. An appendix contains a rich selection of primary sources - state papers, official proclamations, royal records, and letters - for the first thirteen years of Elizabeth's reign. Strype's thorough use of primary sources and the enormous scope and detail of his history has ensured its place as an outstanding work of eighteenth-century scholarship.
Product details
December 2010Paperback
9781108017992
600 pages
216 × 140 × 31 mm
0.69kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 34. Veron the preacher
- 35. The bishop of Worcester's vindication of himself against Sir John Bourne before the privy council
- 36. Some remarks of Coverdale
- 37. The kingdom and church vindication against Osorius, a popish writer
- 38. Matters between France and England
- 39. The second book of Homilies
- 40. A diary of various historical matters of the court and state, falling out this year
- 41. Contest about ministers' apparel
- 42. Several letters between Sampson and Humfrey, and Bullinger and Gualter, divines in Zurick, about the habits
- 43. Some account of Humfrey and Sampson
- 44. Disturbance in Cambridge about the habits
- 45. The controversy between Jewel, bishop of Sarum, and Harding of Lovain
- 46. Prayers and thanksgivings for Malta, besieged by the Turks
- 47. Various occurrences, and matters of state, in the court of England this summer
- 48. The declaration of the London ministers answered
- 49. A session of parliament
- 50. Proposals of marriage between the archduke and the queen
- 51. Orders taken with papists in Lancashire by the ecclesiastical commission
- 52. Sir Henry Killigrew sent to the prince Palatine about religion
- 53. Cavallerius, Hebrew professor at Cambridge
- 54. Great dangers to the church and nation apprehended at hand
- 55. Books written on occasion of this rebellion, addressed to the rebels and papists
- 56. This a year of danger
- 57. Pious men in Cirencester
- Appendix.