
All Hail To The Archpriest Revisits The Debates And Disputes Known Collectively In The Literature On Late Sixteenth And Early Seventeenth Century England As The 'archpriest Controversy'. Peter Lake And Michael Questier Argue That This Was An Extraordinary Instance Of The Conduct Of Contemporary Public Politics And That, In Its Apparent Strangeness, It Is In Fact A Guide To The Ways In Which Contemporaries Negotiated The Unstable Later Reformation Settlement In England. The Published Texts Which Form The Core Of The Arguments Involved In This Debate Survive, As Do Several Caches Of Manuscript Material Generated By The Dispute. Together They Tell Us A Good Deal About The Aspirations Of The Writers And The Networks That They Inhabited. They Also Allow Us To Retell The Progress Of The Dispute Both As A Narrative And As An Instance Of Contemporary Public Argument About Topics Such As The Increasingly Imminent Royal Succession, Late Elizabethan Puritanism, And The Function Of Episcopacy. Our Contention Is That, If One Takes This Material Seriously, It Is Very Hard To Sustain Standard Accounts Of The Accession Of James Vi In England As Part Of An Almost Seamless Continuity Of Royal Government, Contextualised By A Virtually Untroubled And Consensus-based Protestant Account Of The Relationship Between Church And State. Nor Is It Possible To Maintain That By The End Of Elizabeth's Reign The Fraction Of The National Church, Separatist And Otherwise, Which Regarded Itself Or Was Regarded By Others As Catholic, Had Been Driven Into Irrelevance.
This book investigates the Archpriest Controversy as a critical lens for understanding the political and religious instability of late sixteenth and early seventeenth-century England. Authors Michael Questier and Peter Lake, both established historians of the English Reformation, utilize a combination of published polemical texts and archival manuscript caches to challenge traditional historiography. They argue that the dispute was not a peripheral event but a central mechanism through which contemporaries negotiated the complexities of the Reformation settlement, royal succession, and the nature of the national church.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and scholars of early modern England recognize this work as a significant re-evaluation of the political climate during the transition between the Elizabethan and Jacobean eras. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the authors' rigorous engagement with primary source materials to dismantle long-standing consensus-based narratives.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192576690
ISBN-13:
9780192576699
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!