Skip to main content

Church and People in Interregnum Britain: Remembering godly rule

Church and People in Interregnum Britain
Remembering godly rule
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeChurch and People in Interregnum Britain
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

Show the following:

  • Annotations
  • Resources
Search within:

Adjust appearance:

  • font
    Font style
  • color scheme
  • Margins
table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Series Information
  4. Title Page
  5. Copyright Page
  6. Contents
  7. List of figures
  8. List of tables
  9. List of contributors
  10. Acknowledgements
  11. Abbreviations
  12. Introduction: stability and flux: the Church in the interregnum
  13. The administration of the interregnum Church
    1. 1. What happened in English and Welsh parishes c.1642–62?: a research agenda
      1. Many traditional parish records were lost, but were there any gains?
      2. What happened to parish registers?
      3. What happened to parish records in general?
      4. What happened to parish clergy?
      5. What happened to Church officials?
      6. What happened to Church services, customs and ‘rites of passage’?
      7. What happened to the maintenance and repair of churches?
      8. How were parishes financed during this period?
      9. What happened to ‘Church/state relations’ during this period?
      10. How did people feel about these changes?
      11. How can we get towards a fuller picture?
    2. 2. ‘Soe good and godly a worke’: the surveys of ecclesiastical livings and parochial reform during the English Revolution
    3. 3. The ecclesiastical patronage of Oliver Cromwell, c.1654–60
  14. The clergy of the Commonwealth
    1. 4. The impact of the landscape on the clergy of seventeenth- century Dorset
      1. Introduction
      2. The Dorset landscape and its impact on parochial experiences
      3. Impact of parish terrain
      4. Value and use of glebe land
      5. Tithe income
      6. Persecution
      7. Cross-county mobility
      8. Conclusion
    2. 5. The clergy of Sussex: the impact of change, 1635–65
      1. Methodological issues
      2. Puritanism
      3. Clergy origins
      4. Education
      5. Wealth and wills
      6. Ejections and displacement
      7. Conclusion
  15. Enforcing godly ideals
    1. 6. ‘Breaching the laws of God and man’: secular prosecutions of religious offences in the interregnum parish, 1645–60
      1. Profaning the Sabbath
      2. Because of swearing, the land mourneth
      3. Keeping a close eye on adulterers
      4. Such persons as refuse to pay their dues
      5. Disorders in church
      6. Prosecutions for non-conformity
    2. 7. Scandalous Ayr: parish-level continuities in 1650s Scotland
      1. Early modern scandal
      2. Scandal in mid-seventeenth-century Scotland
      3. Ayr’s kirk session and scandal
      4. Parish-level continuities
      5. Conclusion
  16. Traditionalist religion: patterns of persistence and resistance
    1. 8. Malignant parties: loyalist religion in southern England
      1. Evidence for the Directory and the Book of Common Prayer
      2. Evidence for the celebration of major festivals
      3. Other evidence for loyalist religion
      4. The Restoration and after
    2. 9. ‘God’s vigilant watchmen’: the words of episcopalian clergy in Wales, 1646–60
      1. Introduction
      2. Civil War context, 1641–7
      3. Political words
      4. Conclusion
  17. Remembering godly rule
    1. 10. ‘A crack’d mirror’: reflections on ‘godly rule’ in Warwickshire in 1662
      1. Flight and ejection, 1642–57
      2. Puritan intruders in the 1640s and 1650s
      3. The Warwickshire clergy of 1660–2
        1. Disputed titles
        2. Clerical remuneration
        3. Religious separatism
      4. Returners
      5. Remainers
      6. Puritan intruders who conformed
      7. Ejected puritans and ‘new loyalists’, 1660–2
      8. The mirrors of memory
      9. Conclusion
  18. Index

Remembering godly rule

Annotate

Next Chapter
10. ‘A crack’d mirror’: reflections on ‘godly rule’ in Warwickshire in 1662
PreviousNext
University of London Press
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org