Title Details
216 Pages
23.4 x 15.6 cm
Series: Royal Historical Society Studies in History New Series
Series Vol. Number:
79
Imprint: Royal Historical Society
English Catholic Exiles in Late Sixteenth-Century Paris
- Description
- Contents
- Reviews
An investigation of the activities of Catholic exiles in Paris, showing them to have a wider influence on both sides of the Channel.
Religious exile was both a familiar and a deeply discomforting phenomenon in Reformation Europe. In the turbulent context of the later sixteenth century, a group of English Catholic exiles in Paris became a source of serious concern to the Protestant government at home and a destabilising presence in their host environment; their residence in Paris coincided with and contributed to a crisis in authority for the French Crown, and the buildup to the Spanishenterprise of England.
This book uses a range of evidence from both sides of the Channel to investigate the polemical and practical impact of religious exile. It reconstructs the experience and priorities of the English Catholic laity and clergy in Paris, moving beyond contemporary stereotypes of the exiles, and the traditional historiographical view of English Catholicism as isolated and introverted. It emphasises the importance of placing English Catholic experience into a broader European context, shedding light on the significant place of France in their activity, thus offering a new angle entirely on the relationship between England and the continent in the early modern period.
Katy Gibbons is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Portsmouth.
Religious exile was both a familiar and a deeply discomforting phenomenon in Reformation Europe. In the turbulent context of the later sixteenth century, a group of English Catholic exiles in Paris became a source of serious concern to the Protestant government at home and a destabilising presence in their host environment; their residence in Paris coincided with and contributed to a crisis in authority for the French Crown, and the buildup to the Spanishenterprise of England.
This book uses a range of evidence from both sides of the Channel to investigate the polemical and practical impact of religious exile. It reconstructs the experience and priorities of the English Catholic laity and clergy in Paris, moving beyond contemporary stereotypes of the exiles, and the traditional historiographical view of English Catholicism as isolated and introverted. It emphasises the importance of placing English Catholic experience into a broader European context, shedding light on the significant place of France in their activity, thus offering a new angle entirely on the relationship between England and the continent in the early modern period.
Katy Gibbons is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Portsmouth.
Introduction
The home and host contexts for Elizabethan exiles
Between civility and piety: exile niches in an urban environment
Exile in action: communicating and propagating the cause of radical Catholicism
Making sense of exile: alternative and competing representations
Returning or remaining? Divisions and longer term developments in English Catholicism
Conclusion
Bibliography
The home and host contexts for Elizabethan exiles
Between civility and piety: exile niches in an urban environment
Exile in action: communicating and propagating the cause of radical Catholicism
Making sense of exile: alternative and competing representations
Returning or remaining? Divisions and longer term developments in English Catholicism
Conclusion
Bibliography
"Paint[s] a rich, nuanced picture of Elizabethan Catholic life." EUROPEAN HISTORY QUARTERLY
"Engaging and stimulating." CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW
"[It] will serve as a useful introduction to those unfamiliar with the cultures of foreign Catholicism in Elizabethan England. It is, in many ways, an excellent book, lucid, honest and reliable. It will command a wide audience in any course on English religious identities, and deservedly so." JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY
"A fine account." ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW
"[A] well researched and finely crafted monograph. [.] This study deserves to be widely read. Its careful analysis of exile movements, motivations, and connections suggests further reasons for rejecting the simplistic binary of 'loyal' and 'disloyal' papists around whom the study of post-Reformation Catholicism was until recently configured." SIXTEENTH CENTURY JOURNAL
"A welcome addition to a growing body of scholarship that places the Early Modern British Catholic experience in the context of European politics and religious struggle. [It is] a well-researched and elegant book that adds an important new dimension to our understanding of Early Modern religious exile." RECUSANT HISTORY
"BR> [An] engaging and stimulating book [and] and important contribution." CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW
Hardcover
9780861933136
August 2011
£80.00 / $110.00
Ebook (EPDF)
9781846159671
August 2011
$29.95 / £19.99
Title Details
216 Pages
2.34 x 1.56 cm
Series: Royal Historical Society Studies in History New Series
Series Vol. Number:
79
Imprint: Royal Historical Society