Download Henry VIII and the English Reformation by Richard Rex (auth.) PDF

By Richard Rex (auth.)

Show description

Read Online or Download Henry VIII and the English Reformation PDF

Best england books

Decision-Making in Medieval Agriculture

This interesting and critical booklet makes use of a wealth of up to date assets to reconstruct the psychological global of medieval farmers and, by way of doing so, argues that there was a stereotypical interpretation of the center a long time. David Stone overturns the normal view of medieval countrymen as economically backward and as an alternative unearths that agricultural decision-making used to be as rational within the fouteenth century as nowa days.

The Big Walks of the North

From the nice Glen option to the Coast to Coast direction, there isn't any greater approach to realize the brilliant range of northern Britain's panorama than taking walks. no matter if you get pleasure from exploring eco-friendly and lightly rolling dales or tackling rugged mountain paths, there are walks right here to maintain you rambling all 12 months around.

Society and Cultural Forms in Nineteenth Century England

The transformation of British society during the nineteenth century is a average of ancient description. The transition from an business yet nonetheless predominantly agricultural society, with lots of its conventional, vertically equipped types of social association nonetheless intact, to a predominantly city, category divided and recognizably glossy society is still one of many impressive adjustments of social historical past, the prototype certainly for a lot of human heritage within the twentieth century.

1415 : Henry V’s year of glory

An epic account of King Henry V and the mythical conflict of Agincourt, from the writer of the bestselling Time Traveller's consultant to Medieval England.
Henry V is considered the nice English hero. Lionised in his personal lifetime for his victory at Agincourt, his piety and his rigorous program of justice, he was once increased by way of Shakespeare right into a champion of English nationalism. yet does he fairly should be regarded as 'the maximum guy who ever governed England'?

In Ian Mortimer's groundbreaking publication, he portrays Henry within the pivotal yr of his reign; recording the dramatic occasion of 1415, he deals the fullest, such a lot detailed and least romanticised view we've of Henry and of what he did. the result's not just a desirable reappraisal of Henry; it brings to the fore many unpalatable truths which biographies and army historians have mostly neglected. on the centre of the publication is the crusade which culminated within the conflict of Agincourt: a slaughter floor designed to not increase England's curiosity at once yet to illustrate God's approval of Henry's royal authority on each side of the channel.

1415 was once a 12 months of spiritual persecution, own anguish and one horrendous conflict. this can be the tale of that 12 months, as visible over the shoulder of its so much cold-hearted, such a lot formidable and such a lot celebrated hero.

Extra info for Henry VIII and the English Reformation

Sample text

The mean clear income of the archdeaconries was about f:70 a year, but the mean clear income of the archdeacons was nearly f:200 a year. '. Overlapping to some extent with this elite was the vast body of parochial clergy. The parish priests oflate medieval England, be they incumbents (rectors or vicars) or curates, seem for the most part to have been decent, respectable, and tolerably educated men. There was a trend for increasing numbers of incumbents to be graduates. 6 Bishops were especially keen to use their patronage to promote graduates in the early sixteenth century.

The province of Canterbury comprised the archdiocese of Canterbury itself; the English dioceses ofBath and Wells, Chichester, Coventry and Lichfield, Ely, Exeter, Hereford, Lincoln, London, Norwich, Rochester, Salisbury, Winchester, and Worcester; and the Welsh dioceses of St Asaph 's, St David's, Bangor, and Llandaff. The province ofYork comprised the archdiocese ofYork and the dioceses of Carlisle and Durham. The dioceses were all rich landholding institutions, although their wealth varied widely.

Each diocese was composed of one or more archdeaconries (numbering sixty before the Reformation), which themselves varied enormously in size . Lincoln was divided into eight archdeaconries, while Rochester contained only one. The vast northern archdeaconries of Chester (Coventry and Lichfield) and Richmond (York), functioned almost as dioceses in their own right. Every archdeaconry was further divided into deaneries, the units of episcopal visitation. And deaneries themselves were composed of parishes, the basic administrative units of the church.

Download PDF sample

Rated 4.61 of 5 – based on 50 votes