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Insular Christianity - (Politics, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain) by Robert Armstrong & Tadhg Hannracháin (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- This collection of essays on the alternative establishments which both Presbyterians and Catholics attempted to create in Britain and Ireland offers a dynamic new perspective on the evolution of post-reformation religious communities.
- About the Author: Robert Armstrong is Associate Professor of History, Trinity College DublinTadhg Ó hAnnracháin is Senior Lecturer in the School of History and Archives at University College Dublin
- 288 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Christianity
- Series Name: Politics, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain
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About the Book
This focused collection of essays on the alternative establishments which both Presbyterians and Catholics attempted to create in Britain and Ireland offers a dynamic new perspective on the evolution of post-reformation religious communities within Britain and Ireland.Book Synopsis
This collection of essays on the alternative establishments which both Presbyterians and Catholics attempted to create in Britain and Ireland offers a dynamic new perspective on the evolution of post-reformation religious communities. Deriving from the Insular Christianity project in Dublin, the book combines essays by some of the leading scholars in the field with work by brilliant and upcoming researchers.
The contributions, all of which were commissioned, range from synoptic essays which fill in gaps in the existing historiography to tightly coherent research essays that break new ground with regard to a series of central institutional and intellectual issues and problems. This is a book which will appeal to all those interested in the religious history of early modern Britain and Ireland.From the Back Cover
This focused collection of essays offers a dynamic new perspective on the evolution of post-reformation religious communities within Britain and Ireland. It presents a host of unique insights into alternative models of the church across the entire archipelago by providing a wide-ranging comparison of two communions, Presbyterianism and Catholicism. Both religions aspired to the formation of national communities of belief but, periodically or permanently, adapted to the disempowered position of dissident or proscribed faiths.
Deriving from the Insular Christianity project in Dublin, the book combines essays by some of the leading scholars in the field with work by up-and-coming researchers. The contributions range from synoptic essays which fill gaps in the existing historiography to tightly coherent research essays that break new ground with regard to a series of central institutional and intellectual issues and problems, including the role of the laity in sustaining extra-legal confessions, the complexities of toleration and the claim to churchly status, and the roles of intellectuals in forging the self-understanding of faith communities. This is a book which all serious students of the religious history of early modern Britain and Ireland should read. It will also appeal to those interested in the national histories of England, Ireland and Scotland who wish to learn how developments within the archipelago as a whole inflected the religious development of their own societies.About the Author
Robert Armstrong is Associate Professor of History, Trinity College DublinTadhg Ó hAnnracháin is Senior Lecturer in the School of History and Archives at University College Dublin