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Beskrivning
Inspired by the path-breaking work of Robert Tittler, the authors explore late Medieval and Early Modern community and identity across England. They examine the decline of neighbourliness, the politics of market towns, clerical status, charity, crime, and ways in which overlapping communities of court and country, London and Lancashire, relate.
NORMAN L. JONES is Professor and Chair of History at Utah State University, USA. He has held visiting fellowships at Harvard University, the Huntington Library, and Christ Church and Lincoln College, Oxford. His publications include Faith by Statute. Parliament and the Settlement of Religion, 1559 (1982), God and the Moneylenders. Usury and Law in Early Modern England (1989), The Parliaments of Elizabethan England (1990), The Birth of the Elizabethan Age: England in the 1560s (1992), and The English Reformation. Religion and Cultural Adaptation (2002). In 200
Innehållsförteckning
Notes on Contributors Robert Tittler: an Appreciation Introduction; N.L.Jones & D.Woolf The 'decline of neighbourliness' revisited; K.Wrightson Whoring Priests and Godly Citizens: Law, Morality, and Clerical Sexual Misconduct in Late Medieval London; S.McSheffrey Locals, Outsiders, and Identity in English Market Towns, 1290-1620; M.K.McIntosh 'Berwick is our England': Local and National Identities in an Elizabethan Border Town; K.J.Kesselring The Alehousekeeper's Revenge: London's Role in the Reformation Process in a Lancashire Parish; J.P.Ward Sir Francis Knollys and his Progeny: Court and Country in the Thames Valley; A.F.Johnston Married to the Town: Francis Parlett's Rhetoric of Urban Magistracy in Early Modern England; C.F.Patterson The Charity of London Widows in the Later Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries; I.W.Archer Locality and Self in the Elizabethan Lottery of the 1560s; D.Dean Building Bridewell: London's Self-Images, 1550-1640; P.Griffiths