This volume explores the relationship between reformations on the European continent and in Britain. Addressing issues from book history, to popular politics and theological polemic, it identifies how British reception contributed tocontinued reform on the continent, and considers the perception (and invention) of England's 'exceptional' status. INDICE: Polly Ha: Reformation and the Uses of Reception; Patrick Collinson: The Fog in the Channel Clears: The Rediscovery of the Continental Dimension to the British Reformation; Bruce Gordon: The Authority of Antiquity: England and the Protestant Latin Bible; Elisabeth Leedham-Green: Unreliable Witnesses; John S. Craig: Erasmus or Calvin? The politics of book purchase in the early modern English parish; Carl R. Trueman & Carrie Euler: The Reception of Martin Luther in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century England; Torrance Kirby: Peter Martyr Vermigli's political theology and the Elizabethan Church; Jane E. A. Dawson: John Knox, Christopher Goodman and the 'Example of Geneva'; Anthony Milton: The Church of England and the Palatinate, 1566-1642; Nicholas Thompson: Martin Bucer and Early Seventeenth-Century Scottish Irenicism; Howard Hotson: 'A Reformation of Common Learning': Educational reform in Reformed central Europe and its reception in the English-speaking world, c. 1642; Andrew Pettegree: Afterword
- ISBN: 978-0-19-726468-3
- Editorial: Oxford University
- Encuadernacion: Cartoné
- Páginas: 280
- Fecha Publicación: 09/12/2010
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés