Community and Clergy
Bristol and the Reformation c.1530-c.1570
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Hardback
£46.49
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Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780198201816
Number of Pages: 332
Published: 29/04/1993
Width: 14.2 cm
Height: 22.4 cm
This is a study of Bristol during the sixteenth century, when it was the third largest city in England and an important provincial capital. The local focus of the book belies the breadth and innovation it brings to the study of the English clergy, the Reformation, and the early modern city.
Martha C. Skeeters examines the clergy of Bristol in its entirety - monks, friars, and the parish clergy - and integrates it into the urban context. Dr Skeeters demonstrates that by the early sixteenth century these various sorts of clergy had become co-operative rather than competitive, and formed a community which was a fundamental part of the city's collective identity. She explores the impact of the Reformation on the clerics of Bristol and its lay citizens in an original and scholarly account which has much to offer both ecclesiastical and urban historians.
The late medieval church and clergy; community and conflict - the 1530s; religious conflict - resistance and change; religious houses and chantries - dissolutions and surrenders; the decline of the parish clergy; the new diocese and its clerical elite.
carefully researched and cautiously written book...she stresses the richness and vitality of late-medieval clerical life * American Historical Review * This is an excellent book which will be of interest to both the ecclesiastical and the urban historian. It is enriched by four appendices: lists of parish clergy and the religious; deans of Holy Trinity Cathedral, 1542-1580; canons and prebendaries; and a chronology of the dissolution of religious houses. The thirty-page bibliography is most helpful. * Don S. Armentrout, School of Theology, Sewanee, Tennessee, Church History, Jun 1995 *