Examines the experiences of Catholics during the period when England was ruled by Puritan Protestants. This is the first book to examine thoroughly the ways in which Catholics adapted to political and social change during the turbulent years of the English Revolution. The book examines several important aspects of the Catholic experience in this period. It explores the penal laws by which the estates of Catholics were sequestrated, discussing the extent to which politicians designed the new laws to target Catholics specifically, rather than Royalists more generally, and outlining how the sequestration legislation operated in practice. It considers how Catholic gentry utilised their networks with influential Protestants with wider political connections when applying to have their sequestrations discharged. More broadly the book reveals how Catholics demonstrated their loyalty and assimilated into society despite being viewed as the natural enemies of the English Republic and Protectorate. The book also compares Catholic experiences to those of other religious minorities and sets the situation in England in the wider European international context of Catholic-Protestant rivalry and warfare, which made Catholics a particularly vulnerable religious minority in Puritan England.
"[An] excellent book that will become important reading for scholars of early modern Catholicism, the English Revolution and religious toleration. Gregory unpicks a complex topic and guides the reader through the sequestration and compounding processes with ease." - JOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY, LITERATURE & CULTURE
"The book's greatest strength is its connection of several streams of interrelated material...that elucidate the complicated history of an engaged group rejected by the nation to whom they hoped to prove loyal." - THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
"[A] detailed and lively study." - CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW
"[T]his detailed and lively study is essentially one of continuity in Catholic negotiation with the state before and after these years, notwithstanding the upheavals of the Revolution." - CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW
"Overall, Gregory succeeds in explaining the intricacies of a complex financial system that was constantly shifting, convincing with her argument that as sequestration evolved, so did Catholic efforts to protect their estates. Importantly, on a wider scale, Gregory plugs the Catholic experience back into the general narrative and opens the door to future research in the area." - Journal of British Studies
Формат: Скан PDf
"[An] excellent book that will become important reading for scholars of early modern Catholicism, the English Revolution and religious toleration. Gregory unpicks a complex topic and guides the reader through the sequestration and compounding processes with ease." - JOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY, LITERATURE & CULTURE
"The book's greatest strength is its connection of several streams of interrelated material...that elucidate the complicated history of an engaged group rejected by the nation to whom they hoped to prove loyal." - THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
"[A] detailed and lively study." - CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW
"[T]his detailed and lively study is essentially one of continuity in Catholic negotiation with the state before and after these years, notwithstanding the upheavals of the Revolution." - CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW
"Overall, Gregory succeeds in explaining the intricacies of a complex financial system that was constantly shifting, convincing with her argument that as sequestration evolved, so did Catholic efforts to protect their estates. Importantly, on a wider scale, Gregory plugs the Catholic experience back into the general narrative and opens the door to future research in the area." - Journal of British Studies
Формат: Скан PDf
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