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The Religious Orders in Pre-Reformation England
Edited by James G. Clark

It continues to be assumed in some quarters that England's monasteries and mendicant convents fell into a headlong decline - pursuing high living and low morals - long before Henry VIII set out to destroy them at the Dissolution. The essays in this book add to the growing body of scholarly enquiry which challenges this view. Drawing on some of the most recent research by British and American scholars, they offer a wide-ranging reassessment of the religious orders on the eve of the Reformation. They consider not only the condition of their communities and the character of life within them, but also their wider contribution - spiritual, intellectual and economic - to English society at large. What emerges is the impression that the years leading up to the Dissolution were neither as dark nor as difficult for the regular religious as many earlier histories have led us to believe. It was a period of institutional and religious reform, and, for the Benedictines at least, a period of marked intellectual revival. Many religious houses also continued to enjoy close relations with the lay communities living beyond their precinct walls. While their role in the devotions of many ordinary lay folk may have diminished, they still had a significant part to play in the local economy, in education and in a wide range of social and cultural activities. Contributors: JEREMY CATTO, JAMES G. CLARK, GLYN COPPACK, CLAIRE CROSS, PETER CUNICH, VINCENT GILLESPIE, JOAN GREATEX, BARBARA HARVEY, F. DONALD LOGAN, MARILYN OLIVA, MICHAEL ROBSON, R.N. SWANSON, BENJAMIN THOMPSON.

 

DETAILS

6 line illustrations
262 pages
Size: 23.4 x 15.6 cm
13 digit ISBN: 9780851159003
Binding: Hardback
First published: 01/Jan/2100
Price: 105.00 USD / 55.00 GBP
Imprint: Boydell Press
Series: Studies in the History of Medieval Religion
Subject: Medieval History

BIC class: HRAX

STATUS: Available
Details updated on 05/01/2009

Contents
1   Introduction: The Religious Orders in Pre-Reformation England
James G. Clark
2   After Knowles: Recent Perspectives in Monastic History
Joan Greatrex
3   A Novice's Life at Westminster Abbey in the Century before the Dissolution
Barbara Harvey
4   Syon and the New Learning
Vincent Gillespie
5   Franciscan Learning, 1450-1540
Jeremy Catto
6   The Friars Minor in York, 1450-1540
Michael Robson
7   Mendicants and Confraternity
Robert N Swanson
8   Yorkshire Nunneries in the Early Tudor Period
Claire Cross
9   Patterns of Patronage to Female Monasteries in the Late Middle Ages
Marilyn Oliva
10   Monasteries, Society and Reform in Late Medieval England
Benjamin Thompson
11   The Planning of Cistercian Monasteries in the Later Middle Ages: the evidence from Fountains, Rievaulx, Sawley and Rushen
Glyn Coppack
12   Departure from the Religious Life During the Royal Visitation of the Monasteries, 1535-36
F. Donald Logan
13   The Ex-Religious in Post-Dissolution Society: Symptoms of Post- Traumatic Stress Disorder?
Peter Cunich

Reviews
In their variety of subjects and approaches [these essays] provide revealing insights into the current directions of scholarly thinking about the last century of the religious orders in medieval England....The impression left is of the vitality of current research. CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW I recommend this book. It helps shed light on one of the greatest social changes that occurred in England during the 16th century. But, by the same token, it reminds us how much more work needs to be done before one can even begin to understand the origins of the modern world in which we live. COLLOQUIUM A highly valuable contribution to a debate which still deserves further attention. SOUTHERN HISTORY 25



 

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