William Laud, archbishop of Canterbury from 1633 to 1645, is a central
figure in the history of seventeenth-century Britain. Laud's
correspondence provides revealing insights into his mind, methods and
activities, especially in the 1630s, as he sought to remodel the
church and the clerical estate in the three kingdoms. _The Further
Correspondence of William Laud_ prints 223 letters, drawn from
thirty-eight libraries and archives, which were not included in the
nineteenth-century edition of his _Works_. It has real importance for
our perception of Laud and the early Stuart church, greatly increasing
the number of his letters for the 1620s and providing significant new
information, such as the three earliest letters to his closest
political ally, Thomas Wentworth, in 1630. Other correspondents
include politicians such as Sir John Coke and Lord Keeper Coventry,
the diplomat Sir William Boswell, numerous heads of colleges at both
Oxford and Cambridge, and churchmen such as Bishops John Bridgeman of
Chester and John Bramhall of Derry as well as Cyril Lucaris, Patriarch
of Constantinople. A lengthy introduction assesses the waysin which
these letters deepen our knowledge, broaden our understanding and
refine our views of Laud's various roles, as chief ecclesiastical
counsellor to Charles I, court politician and administrator,
chancellor of Oxford University, and overseer of religious reformation
in the kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland. An appendix lists
all of Laud's correspondence in chronological order. Collectively, the
letters attest to his extraordinary energy andtireless commitment to
reform and point to the indelible impact that Laud made on his
contemporaries.
KENNETH FINCHAM is Professor of Early Modern History at the University
of Kent. He has written extensively on religion and politics in early
modern Britain, including two monographs, _Prelate as Pastor: the
Episcopate of James I_ (1990) and, with Nicholas Tyacke, _Altars
Restored: the Changing Face of English Religious Worship 1547-c.1700_
(2007); edited two collections of essays, _The Early Stuart Church
1603-1642_ (1993) and, with Peter Lake, _Religious Politics in
post-Reformation England_ (2006); and edited two volumes of _Articles
and Injunctions of the Early Stuart Church_ (1994-8) for the Church of
England Record Society.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781787443594
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
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