The Idea of History in Early Stuart England: Erudition, Ideology, and “the Light of Truth” from the Accession of James I to the Civil War, by D.R. WoolfThe Idea of History in Early Stuart England: Erudition, Ideology, and “the Light of Truth” from the Accession of James I to the Civil War, by D.R. Woolf. Toronto, Ontario, University of Toronto Press, 1990. xxii, 377 pp. $50.00.

1991 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 512-514
Author(s):  
J.P. Kenyon
1987 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 251-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
John J. La Rocca, S.J.
Keyword(s):  
Blow Up ◽  
James I ◽  

MUCH recent research has examined Catholicism in early Stuart England and some has discussed the contribution of anti-Catholicism to the outbreak of the Civil War—but how well-founded were the fears underlying the rhetoric which surfaced in parliament? This paper1 addresses one aspect of that question by looking at certain financial features of Catholic non-conformity (as demonstrated by absence from Anglican services and/or refusal of the oath of allegiance) in the first half of James I’s reign, chiefly between 1606 and 1612. The significance of this period is that it begins just after the attempt to blow up king and parliament and ends with the death of Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury who, during his term of office as Lord Treasurer from 1608 onwards, was grappling with an intractable royal indebtedness which he managed to curtail but not to cure and whose own effectiveness waned following the failure of the Great Contract in 1610.2


Author(s):  
Rosamund Oates

Tobie Matthew (c.1544–1628) lived through the most turbulent times of the English Church. Born during the reign of Henry VIII, he saw Edward VI introduce Protestantism, and then watched as Mary I violently reversed her brother’s changes. When Elizabeth I came to the throne in 1558, Matthew rejected his family’s Catholicism to join the fledgling Protestant regime. Over the next sixty years, he helped build a Protestant Church in England under Elizabeth I, James I, and Charles I. Rising through the ranks of the Church, he was Archbishop of York in the charged decades leading up to the British Civil Wars. Here was a man who played a pivotal role in the religious politics of Tudor and Stuart England, and nurtured a powerful strain of Puritanism at the heart of the established Church....


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