1st Edition

Westminster Abbey Reformed 1540–1640

By C.S. Knighton, Richard Mortimer Copyright 2003
    310 Pages
    by Routledge

    310 Pages
    by Routledge

    Title first published in 2003. Westminster Abbey occupies a unique position in the religious and royal landscape of the United Kingdom and Commonwealth. As the scene of coronations and other great public occasions, it has been the continuing focus of the nation's religious life for half the Christian era. Yet the building itself would not have survived the upheavals of the Protestant Reformation had the institution running it not been itself 'reformed' from monastery into collegiate church. These nine studies discuss ways in which Westminster's new corporate structure evolved in the first century of its existence, and look at some of the personalities who played a part in that process. New research, much of it in the Abbey's own rich archive, opens up previously unseen views of this great church's internal affairs, its relationship with the Crown, and its place in its own locality.

    Contents: Preface; Introduction: Westminster Abbey from Reformation to Revolution; King's College, C.S. Knighton; John Redman, the gentle ambler, Ashley Null; The sanctuary, David Loades; The musicians of Westminster Abbey, 1540-1640, Stanford Lehmberg; The coronations of Edward VI, Mary I and Elizabeth I and the transformation of the Tudor Monarchy, Dale Hoak; 'Under the shadowe of the church'?: the Abbey and the town of Westminster 1530-1640, J.F. Merritt; Richard Neile, Dean of Westminster 1605-1610: home grown talent makes its mark, Andrew Foster; Canon fire: Peter Heylyn at Westminster, Anthony Milton; The Lord of Jerusalem: John Williams as Dean of Westminster, C.S. Knighton; Index.

    Biography

    C.S. Knighton, Richard Mortimer

    'These are efficient and scholarly essays, packed with interesting detail, with important implications for national history as well as for the corporate history of the great Abbey from the Reformation to the Civil War.' Christopher Haigh, University of Oxford '... this is a collection of outstanding essays based on careful and exhaustive research in the abbey's muniments, or archives... Ashgate has published some of the best monographs on early modern British religious history. Westminster Abbey Reformed: 1540-1640 will further cement this reputation for excellence, and will be a welcome addition to the library of anyone who values top-notch scholarship.' Anglican and Episcopal History 'As might be expected, the standard of editing and presentation throughout the volume reaches the highest standards. Despite its rather specialist appeal, it shoud be emphasized that many of the essays it contains throw very useful sidelights on many aspects of the broader religious history of the sixteenth and seventeeth centuries, and it is therefore a volume that no serious student of the religious history of this period can afford to overlook.' Albion