Cambridge studies in early modern British history
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Cambridge studies in early modern British history
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Cambridge studies in early modern British history
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Incoming Resources
- Algernon Sidney and the Restoration crisis, 1677-1683, Jonathan Scott
- Politics, religion and the British revolutions, the mind of Samuel Rutherford, John Coffey
- Crime and mentalities in early modern England, Malcolm Gaskill
- The 1549 rebellions and the making of early modern England, Andy Wood
- Treason and the state, law, politics and ideology in the English Civil War, D. Alan Orr
- Protestantism and patriotism, ideologies and the making of English foreign policy, 1650-1668, Steven C.A. Pincus
- Georgian monarchy, politics and culture, 1714-1760, Hannah Smith
- Images and cultures of law in early modern England, justice and political power, 1558-1660, Paul Raffield
- John Skelton and the politics of the 1520s, Greg Walker
- The devil and demonism in early modern England, Nathan Johnstone
- Reason and religion in the English revolution, the challenge of Socinianism, Sarah Mortimer
- Richard Bancroft and Elizabethan anti-Puritanism, Patrick Collinson
- Defining the Jacobean Church, the politics of religious controversy, 1603-1625, Charles W.A. Prior
- Sir Matthew Hale, 1609-1676, law, religion, and natural philosophy, Alan Cromartie
- The blessed revolution, English politics and the coming of war, 1621-1624, Thomas Cogswell
- The making of an imperial polity, civility and America in the Jacobean metropolis, Lauren Working
- Constitutional royalism and the search for settlement, c. 1640-1649, David L. Smith
- The art of hearing, English preachers and their audiences, 1590-1640, Arnold Hunt
- The House of Lords in the reign of Charles II, Andrew Swatland
- Europe and the making of England, 1660-1760, Tony Claydon
- Richard Bancroft and Elizabethan anti-Puritanism, Patrick Collinson
- John Locke, resistance, religion, and responsibility, John Marshall
- Unquiet lives, marriage and marriage breakdown in England, 1660-1800, Joanne Bailey
- Martial law and English laws, c.1500-c.1700, John M. Collins
- Oaths and the English Reformation, Jonathan Gray
- John Locke, resistance, religion, and responsibility, John Marshall
- Law-making and society in late Elizabethan England, the Parliament of England, 1584-1601, David Dean
- The reconstruction of the Church of Ireland, Bishop Bramhall and the Laudian reforms, 1633-1641, John McCafferty
- Public opinion in early modern Scotland, c.1560-1707, Karin Bowie, University of Glasgow
- Algernon Sidney and the Restoration Crisis, 1677 1683, Jonathan Scott
- Carnal knowledge, regulating sex in England, 1470-1600, Martin Ingram, Brasenose College, University of Oxford
- Charles I and the road to personal rule, L.J. Reeve
- Popular politics and the English Reformation, Ethan H. Shagan
- The bishops' wars, Charles I's campaigns against Scotland, 1638-1640, Mark Charles Fissel
- Mercy and authority in the Tudor state, K.J. Kesselring
- Stewards, lords, and people, the estate steward and his world in later Stuart England, D.R. Hainsworth
- The 1549 rebellions and the making of early modern England, Andy Wood
- The politics and culture of honour in Britain and Ireland, 1541-1641, Brendan Kane
- Memory and the dissolution of the monasteries in early modern England, Harriet Lyon, University of Cambridge
- The smoke of London, energy and environment in the early modern city, William M. Cavert
- The blind devotion of the people, popular religion and the English Reformation, Robert Whiting
- The pursuit of stability, social relations in Elizabethan London, Ian W. Archer
- Carnal knowledge, regulating sex in England, 1470-1600, Martin Ingram
- Patterns of piety, women, gender, and religion in late medieval and Reformation England, Christine Peters
- Crime, gender, and social order in early modern England, Garthine Walker
- Exile and kingdom, history and apocalypse in the Puritan migration to America, Avihu Zakai
- The poverty of disaster, debt and insecurity in eighteenth-century Britain, Tawny Paul
- John Locke, toleration and early Enlightenment culture, religious intolerance and arguments for religious toleration in early modern and 'early Enlightenment' Europe, John Marshall
- An uncounselled king, Charles I and the Scottish troubles, 1637-1641, Peter Donald
- Female friends and the making of transAtlantic Quakerism, 1650-1750, Naomi Pullin, University of Warwick