FIRST FULL-LENGTH ACCOUNT OF ST STEPHEN'S CHAPEL, BRINGING OUT ITS
FULL IMPORTANCE AND INFLUENCE THROUGHOUT THE MIDDLE AGES.
In St Stephen's College, the royally-favoured religious institution at
the heart of the busy administrative world of the Palace of
Westminster, church and state met and collaborated for two centuries,
from its foundation to pray for the royal dead by Edward III in 1348,
until it was swept away by the second wave of the Reformation in 1548.
Monarchs and visitors worshipped in the distinctive chapel on the
Thames riverfront. Even when the king and his household were absent,
the college's architecture, liturgy and musical strength proclaimed
royal piety and royal support for the Church to all who passed by.
This monograph recreates a lost institution, whose spectacular
cloister still survives deep within the modern Houses of Parliament.
It examines its relationship with every English king from Edward III
to Edward VI, how it defined itself as the "king's chief chapel"
through turbulent dynastic politics,and its contributions to the early
years of the English Reformation. It offers a new perspective on the
workings of political, administrative and court life in medieval and
early modern Westminster.
Dr ELIZABETH BIGGSstarted work on St Stephen's College as part of the
large research project "St Stephen's Chapel: Visual and Political
Culture, 1292-1941" at the University of York. She has taught at York
and the University of the West of England.
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A Royal Chapel and English Kingship, 1348-1548
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781787448728
Publisert
2021
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter