
Long considered a highly distinctive English writer, Thomas Fuller (1608-1661) has not been treated as the significant historian he was. Fuller's The Church-History of Britain (1655) was the first comprehensive history of Christianity from antiquity to the upheavals of the Protestant and Catholic Reformations and the tumultuous events of the English civil wars. His numerous publications outside the genre of history--sermons, meditations, pamphlets on current thought and events--reflected and helped to shape public opinion during the revolutionary era in which he lived. Thomas Fuller: Discovering England's Religious Past highlights the fact that Fuller was a major contributor to the flowering of historical writing in early modern England. W. B. Patterson provides both a biography of Thomas Fuller's life and career in the midst of the most wrenching changes his country had ever experienced and a critical account of the origins, growth, and achievements of a new kind of history in England, a process to which he made a significant and original contribution. The volume begins with a substantial introduction dealing with memory, uses of the past, and the new history of England in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. Fuller was moved by the changes in Church and state that came during the civil wars that led to the trial and execution of King Charles I and to the Interregnum that followed. He sought to revive the memory of the English past, recalling the successes and failures of both distant and recent events. The book illuminates Fuller's focus on history as a means of understanding the present as well as the past, and on religion and its important place in English culture and society.
This work investigates the historical significance of Thomas Fuller as a pioneering chronicler of English Christianity during the seventeenth-century revolutionary era. W. B. Patterson, a scholar of early modern history, utilizes Fuller's extensive body of work—including his seminal 1655 text, The Church-History of Britain—to argue that Fuller was a central figure in the evolution of historical writing. The author examines how Fuller’s career, lived through the English Civil Wars and the execution of King Charles I, informed his unique approach to documenting religious and political change.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this volume as a corrective to the historical neglect of Fuller’s contributions to English letters. The text is noted for its academic rigor and its success in situating Fuller within the broader development of early modern historical methodology.
Page Count:
378
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192512412
ISBN-13:
9780192512413
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