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Read complete books and articles on: Catholics in England

Roman Catholic Church - Christian church headed by the pope, the bishop of Rome (see papacy and Peter, Saint). Its commonest title in official use is Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. "Roman Catholic" is a 19th-century British coinage and merely serves to distinguish that church from other churches that are "Catholic" (see catholic church). The term "Roman


16 of the Best Books and Articles on: Catholics in England

as selected by Questia librarians
  1. 1.


    Popular Piety in Late Medieval England: The Diocese of Salisbury, 1250-1550 » Read Now

    by Andrew D. Brown. 300 pgs.

    Andrew Brown explores lay piety in its contexts of landscape, society, and the church, and examines the many different issues and activities which were of contemporary importance, such as the religious guilds, charity, and heresy. He shows how the regional variations in social and economic structure...
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    Catholic Devotion in Victorian England » Read Now

    by Mary Heimann. 253 pgs.

    This is a scholarly reassessment of English Roman Catholic piety at grass-roots level in Victorian England. Heimann's study offers a controversial analysis of the influence of long-established recusant practices and attitudes in the new context of the re-establishment of Roman Catholicism in England from the mid-nineteenth century.
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    Lest We Be Damned: Practical Innovation and Lived Experience among Catholics in Protestant England, 1559-1642 » Read Now

    by Lisa McClain. 393 pgs.

    Through compelling personal stories and in rich detail, McClain reveals the give-and-take interaction between the institutional church in Rome and the needs of believers and the hands-on clergy who provided their pastoral care within England. In doing so, she illuminates larger issues of how...
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    Catholic Converts: British and American Intellectuals Turn to Rome » Read Now

    by Patrick Allitt. 343 pgs.

    'An extremely valuable contribution, it makes clear--for the first time--how completely converts dominated the intellectual life of British and American Catholicism....Brisk and lively, eminently readable.' - Philip Gleason, University of Notre Dame
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    Britain and the Papacy in the Age of Revolution, 1846-1851 » Read Now

    by Saho Matsumoto-Best. 196 pgs.

    From the time of the Reformation Anglo-Vatican relations have typically been seen as a long history of unending antagonism and mutual suspicion, but this has not always been the case. This book sheds light on one of the most curious episodes in early Victorian history when, around the time of the...
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    The Reformation in England (Part II "The Last Years of Catholic England") » Read Now

    by Philip Hughes. 404 pgs.

    ...England and, we may now think, luckily for the world. Since the history of the Reformation is, in part, the history of a struggle between Catholics who are English and...
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    The Catholic Reformation (Chap. XIII "The Catholic Reformation in the British Isles") » Read Now

    by Pierre Janelle. 402 pgs.

    ...Yet the prime value of his work consists in the fact that he has made available, for Catholics and non-Catholics alike, an adequate and readable record...information amply...
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    Charles I and the Popish Plot » Read Now

    by Caroline M. Hibbard. 344 pgs.

    ...Recent quantitative analyses of Catholics in the counties have shown that even...concludes that the great majority of Catholics in every county studied remained...
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    English Reformations: Religion, Politics, and Society under the Tudors (Chap. 12 "Catholic Restoration, 1553-1558") » Read Now

    by Christopher Haigh. 372 pgs.

    English Reformations takes a refreshing new approach to the study of the Reformation in England. Christopher Haigh's lively and readable study disproves any facile assumption that the triumph of Protestantism was inevitable, and goes beyond the surface of official political policy to explore the...
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    Mary's Protestant Martyrs and Elizabeth's Catholic Traitors in the Age of Catholic Emancipation, in Church History » Read Now

    by John E. Drabble. 26 pgs.

    ...the loyalty of British Catholics in three letters to the...apologetics. But if Catholics were persecuted in the present, why not...Evangelicals and Anglo- Catholics -- who...
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    Queen Victoria and the Challenge of Roman Catholicism, in The Historian » Read Now

    by Walter L. Arnstein. 20 pgs.

    Collections: History, Entire Library
    ...United Kingdom, including Roman Catholics. In a land of 26 million people...not do ... to give way to the Catholics in the hope of conciliating them...ceremonial occasions...
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    Freedom and Authority: A Study of English Thought in the Early Seventeenth Century (Chap. VI "The Authority of Rome and the Claims of Canterbury" and Chap. VII "The English Catholics and the Problem of Authority") » Read Now

    by Gerald R. Cragg. 338 pgs.

    ...17th century. 4. Catholics in England. 5. Religious...church meant unity in the state, dissent was dangerous. Catholics were persecuted because...the Puritans nor the...
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    Religious Toleration in England, 1787-1833 (Chap. V "Roman Catholic Emancipation") » Read Now

    by Ursula Henriques. 298 pgs.

    ...themselves by their refusal. In 1605 the Roman Catholics who had evaded the heavy fines...the active persecution of Catholics in the eighteenth century was...Dissenters and...
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    God and Greater Britain: Religion and National Life in Britain and Ireland, 1843-1945 ("Catholicism" begins on p. 30) » Read Now

    by John Wolffe. 324 pgs.

    Concern and debate over the role of religion in the make up of the United Kingdom is a contemporaneously relevant as it was in the nineteenth century. God and Greater Britain is a survey of the contribution of religion to society, politics, culture and national self-understanding in Britain and...
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    Catholicism, Controversy and the English Literary Imagination, 1558-1660 » Read Now

    by Alison Shell. 309 pgs.

    The Catholic contribution to English literary culture has been widely neglected or misunderstood. This book sets out to rehabilitate a wide range of Catholic imaginative writing, while exposing the role of anti-Catholicism as an imaginative stimulus to mainstream writers in Tudor and Stuart England...

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  • Type your specific word or phrase in the box above after the word and, then click Search.
  • Put exact phrases in double quotation marks. Do not put single words in quotation marks.
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