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Programme and Registration for "Oaths and Oath-Taking in Historical Perspective, 1600 to the Present"

By Josh Allen - August 1, 2025 (0 comments)

Received from Dr. Henry Miller (Northumbria University)

Oaths and Oath-Taking in Historical Perspective, 1600 to the Present: 1-day historical workshop on the theme of oaths/oath-taking in Britain, Ireland, and the British Empire, 1600-the present organised by Dr. James McConnel and Dr. Henry Miller with support from the Past and Present Society, the Social History Society, and History: The Journal of the Historical Association.

Date and times: Thursday, September 11 · 10:30am – 6pm

Location: Northumbria University – London, 110-114 Middlesex Street, London E1 7HT

Registration

Overview

As the 2023 coronation of King Charles III highlighted, oaths remain a feature of modern British public life. Indeed, though largely taken for granted, oaths and declarations continue to play a much wider role within many state agencies (e.g., cabinet government, parliaments, the judiciary, the magistracy, the armed forces, and the police force). Oaths also feature in other parts of life in the UK: professions including doctors, senior lawyers, and CoE ministers are still required to take oaths. Oaths are also a requirement of some civil society groups (e.g., the Scouts) and are required for membership of some mass-membership associations (e.g., Freemasonry and Orangeism). And since 2004, oaths have been performed at UK citizenship ceremonies up and down the country. Crucially, all these oaths are not just subscribed to in writing, but also performed in person, often in a public, ceremonial context.

In recent decades, early modern historians have advanced our understandings of oaths and oath-taking. As a result, we now have a much better understanding of the role of oaths in changing conceptions of the political community, evolving crown-subject/state-citizen relations, and in relation to generating trust during the upheavals of the seventeenth century and their aftermath. However, understanding the evolution and role of oaths over the longue durée (especially beyond the early eighteenth century) requires more attention, and without assuming they inevitably declined after their early modern heyday. While in the British context, the practice of national oath-taking led by the state declined after the early eighteenth century, oaths remained in common use for a wide variety of purposes. For example, oaths were ubiquitous in civil society, taken on a peer-to-peer basis on admission to friendly societies, trade unions, and various forms of voluntary association. Similarly, although the use of oaths as religious tests to disbar non-Anglicans from public office was largely dismantled in the nineteenth century, this does not explain the varied and continued use of written and oral oaths right up to the present day. Rather than charting a decline from an early modern peak and seeing oaths as an archaic practice that retains a residual presence today, we instead want to explore the different roles that oaths perform and have performed and why this has mattered in different temporal, geographic, social, and political contexts.

This one-day interdisciplinary conference to be held on 11 September 2025 at the London Campus of Northumbria University. It seeks to bring together early modern and modern historians, as well as scholars from across the humanities and social sciences, to consider the historical and contemporary roles of oaths and oath-taking in Britain and Ireland, and beyond.

Programme

(all panels in Room 301)

10.30-10.45 Welcome

10.45-12.15 Panel 1: Cultures of Oath-taking

Carl Griffin (Sussex): ‘Illegal’ oaths and cultures of confederacy in English rural popular protest, c.1740-1840

Maya Kreiner (Hebrew University/Dubnow Institute): ‘Words’ and ‘Things’ in Mandatory Palestine: British Debates on the Oath for the Legislative Council

Nalina Gopal (UCL): Oaths as Performative Utterances: Exploring the Intersection of Language and Law in Colonial Singapore, Penang, and Malacca (18th-20th centuries)

12.15-1 Lunch

1-3 Panel 2: Oaths, Authority, and Exclusion

Laura Stewart (York): The Covenants and the Tender of Union in Cromwellian Scotland

Joshua Grey (Monash): The obligation which it imposes on the Sovereign’: The Coronation Oath in Press Discourses on Catholic Emancipation, 1800-1829

David Torrance (House of Commons Library): The Coronation Oath

Andrew Fincham (Independent Scholar) From Persecution to Affirmation: The Quaker Experiences of Oaths

3-3.15 Break

3.15-4.45 Panel 3: Oaths and Law

Hillary Taylor (Padua): ‘No more harm than breaking a stick’: Popular Attitudes to Oath-Taking and Perjury in Quarter Sessions Records, c. 1660-1750

Zoe Jackson (Cambridge): Untruths Under Oath: Defining Perjury in Early/Modern Perspective

Aidan Collins (Newcastle): The Role, Jurisdiction, and Authority of Bankruptcy Commissioners in Early Modern Debt Recovery, 1684-1733

4.45-5 Break

5-6 Panel 4: Roundtable

***
Contact: Dr. Henry Miller (henry.miller@northumbria.ac.uk)
Past and Present is pleased to support this event and supports other events like it. Applications for event funding are welcomed from scholars working in the field of historical studies at all stages in their careers.

Reflections Upon "Margins to the Centre 2025"

By Josh Allen - July 28, 2025 (0 comments)

by The Margins to the Centre 2025 Organising Team

The Margins to Centre Conference 2025 was an undergraduate-organised conference which took place on the 24th of April 2025 at the University of York. This conference was organised with the primary goal being to provide an academic space to aid in amplifying the voices of marginalised communities throughout history. In addition to this, the conference aspired to enrich the field of historical studies by creating an inclusive, reflective, and interdisciplinary space for academics, students and scholars through curating discussions that bridge traditional scholarship with fresh perspectives. In doing so, we aimed to highlight the contributions of marginalised groups and to critique the lasting influence of dominant narratives and cultural memory which dominate countless academic fields.

Attendees pre-event, photograph by Bardia Bahrami, all rights reserved 2025

The conference was organised around the focal theme of ‘Belonging’. Our organising committee opted to split the conference into four main segments, each of which engaged with significant issues or topics related to the field of historical studies which we felt connected back to our theme of ‘Belonging’. The segments were as follows: Gender and Identity in Historical Perspectives, Marginalisation and Power: Dynamics of Exclusion and Resistance, Reassessing Marginalised and Underutilised Sources, and Colonialism and the Construction of ‘the Other.’ We also were fortunate enough to welcome Hifsa Haroon-Iqbal (OBE DL MPhil) who delivered a very personal insight into her experience as a British Muslim in contemporary Britain. Discussions to arrive at these topics took place over several weeks to ensure that this conference could accommodate for a wide range of conversations, in line with our driving intention of inclusivity.

Conference Committee presenting, photograph by Bardia Bahrami, all rights reserved 2025

Furthermore, the undergraduate-led structure of the conference provides a unique and valuable platform for junior scholars to gain invaluable experience, contributing and shaping the development of academic discourse. With reflection, we believe our undergraduate team offered nothing but strength to the planning and running of the conference as we could really offer a space in which all strata of academics would feel welcomed, from fellow undergraduate students to senior professors and advocates. The team is made up of undergraduate students with a passion for diversifying the formal academic space who seek to gain greater participation within the wider field and hope to bring a wide range of speakers to York, whom our attendees can learn from in an intimate and engaging setting.

However, we wholeheartedly extend our thanks to Prof. Simon Ditchfield and Dr. Lucy Sackville from the department. Their advice was integral in our understanding and experience of organising this event and their support was vital in its resounding success. Ultimately, the Margins to Centre Conference 2025 strove to create a space that not only celebrates diversity in scholarship but also actively reshapes the field to include a broader spectrum of experiences and contributions, past and present.

As this is an undergraduate-led event, we have approached undergraduate and postgraduate speakers to support the event and to present dissertation work, or other individual research they have not had the opportunity to pursue within their modules. We believe that by framing the event in this way it gives greater opportunity for undergraduates who are keen to progress in academia and pursue a PhD are given the opportunity to engage with and learn from leading academics within the field. By bringing together senior researchers with those at the beginning of their academic careers, we hope to nurture valuable connections between these groups and hold a space for productive conversations to take place.

Attendee views conference research poster display, photograph by Bardia Bahrami, all rights reserved 2025

A standout speaker within this category was our very own team member Stella Kindred who delivered a talk entitled ‘English Anchorites and their Communities in the High Middle Ages.’ The discussion of female rebellion through the harnessing of religious power in England following the Norman Conquest brought an energy and excitement to the commencement of the conference which only continued throughout the day. Following Stella, Professor Helen Smith delved into the world of Early Modern book printing and explored women’s centrality to the book trade. Rounding out our opening section we welcomed final year student Holly Tilling who delivered an excerpt of her dissertation research, providing a though-provoking and detailed insight into the ‘Textual Interactions between the querelle des femmes and Early Modern Female-Authored Heroidean Complaint.’

During our breaks the buzz of conversation in the air was a huge encouragement to the team that things were going smoothly. We would also like to extend our thanks to the people who contributed tri-folds of their research for people to read and discuss during these breaks. It was amazing for us to offer another way for people to present and share their work, without the additional pressure of presenting. These would not have been possible without the support of Past and Present, whose generous grant allowed us to provide these materials to students free of charge and created a space for fruitful scholarly conversation without an additional financial burden.

Attendee in front of part of the conference research poster display, photograph by Bardia Bahrami, all rights reserved 2025

Following this break Dr Emilie Murphy delved into the mobility of Early Modern Catholic Convents abroad and discussed the prevalence of translation and transmission of language and culture following the condemnation of Roman Catholicism in England. We also heard from Professor Indrajit Roy from the Politics department who offered a fresh perspective on the Global Politics of Hope and explored how imaginations of democratic renewal are becoming a focal point for struggles against autocracies and authoritarianism.

We next welcomed Professor Sara de Jong who presented her powerful work ‘We Are Here, Because You Were There: Afghan Interpreters in the UK.’ Organiser Kasey stated ‘Candidly, I was not too familiar with Sara’s work prior to the conference, but now having listened to her speak I am proud that we had such an integral woman of investigating marginalised perspectives included in the event.’ Predominantly, her talk included a video of Afghan Interpreters talking of their own experiences, which I felt was ingenious to discuss this topic. Having been able to hear from first hand experiences, Sara achieved exactly what we sought for the conference to achieve. The video shared experiences of Afghan interpreters who were employed by the British Army in Afghanistan between 2004 and 2021, and who then resettled to the UK in 2021. This invited vital discussions from the audience, asking Sara of her experiences in researching for this collaborative project, and even questioning her on current world events. Her work remains relevant to understanding how communities communicate and co-exist today, which only came from engaging with these marginalised perspectives. One of the only quarms of our organisation of the event is that we could not allow more time to discuss this thought-provoking project.

Profs. Sara de Jong and Indrajit Roy participating in a panel discussion, photograph by Bardia Bahrami, all rights reserved 2025

Following Sara de Jong we welcomed our keynote speaker Hifsa Haroon Iqbal (OBE DL MPhil) to the stage. Hifsa’s talk ‘Belonging in Modern Britain’ offered crucial insight into what it means to embrace your national identity and heritage. These insights and discussions are ever relevant to contemporary British society, and we feel privileged to have been able to listen to Hifsa at this event. Hifsa allowed us to listen to her story and shared her perspectives which are too often not openly discussed. Without the funding of Past & Present, we would not have been able to accept her contribution, and as such the conference would have been limited in achieving our goal of exploring marginalised histories. Amongst the academics included in the conference, predominantly our theme of ‘Belonging’ was discussed with relation to historical events. Whilst we as historians value how the past can inform the present and future, we felt it was equally important to highlight that these themes are equally felt in societies and communities today. Therefore, it was through the inclusion of Hifsa that we were able to achieve this goal and recognise the cruciality of identity and inclusion in the formations of communities in the present.

Hifsa Haroon Iqbal (OBE DL MPhil) delivering conference Keynote, photograph by Bardia Bahrami, all rights reserved 2025

Following Hifsa’s insightful personal account welcomed Dr Pragya Vohra to discuss the Coppergate Women, a figure especially pertinent to York’s history. Here she set osteological studies alongside the historical context of the period and theories of migration, in an attempt to try to understand how this individual lived and what that life might tell us about the society of which she was a part. Dr Shazia Jagot introduced the medieval scientific astrolabe into an entirely new context as she explored how this object, which fascinated the fourteenth-century English writer Geoffrey Chaucer, can connect contemporary and medieval Britain with al-Andalus, Cairo, and Baghdad.

To round off the conference, Dr Purba Hossain brought attention to the Untold Story of Bibee Zuhoorun. Zuhoorun was a female labourer who migrated from eastern India to Mauritius in the 1830s. As the earliest voice of female indentured labourers, Zuhoorun’s presence in the colonial archive offers a rare insight into early indenture migration, painting a story of deception, ill-treatment and injustice. Dr Hossain’s use of Zuhoorun’s testimony provided valuable understanding of the themes of difference and belonging on the colonial plantation. Closing the conference we welcomed third-year students Eloise Gibson and Libby Foxwell to present a piece they had written for our internal historical magazine, The Young Historian, entitled ‘A Western Phenomenon?: A Study of Witchcraft in Colonial Africa.’ This presentation aimed to recentre African witchcraft and its place in colonial history, due to its understudied position in western history.

Group photograph of the Conference Organising Committee, photograph by Bardia Bahrami, all rights reserved 2025

Overall, we were hugely proud of how the conference ran and the extensive discussions and conversations which took place throughout the day; however, time management certainly became the trickiest point to manage. We endeavoured to include as many perspectives as we possibly could. It was hugely significant for us as a committee that we offered a breadth of historical perspectives, time and events in order to discuss as many marginalised histories as we could. However, with this meant we had to be especially strict on timings, which became increasingly difficult when we were then able to listen to the talks and become engulfed in the interesting topics at hand. The panel formation of the talks hugely benefited the event, and arguably produced some of the best, and most engaging moments. Of course, with our intention of this conference, we wanted to ensure that the audience could leave feeling as if they had truly gained perspectives on topics and experiences, they would have been otherwise unfamiliar with. We are incredibly pleased with the outcomes of this conference and the space we created for such free-flowing and inclusive discussion. The future of interdisciplinary research and re-centring of marginalised histories is bright, and we are immensely proud to have contributed in some small way to this vitally important and growing field.

Past & Present was pleased to support this event and supports other events like it. Applications for event funding are welcomed from scholars working in the field of historical studies at all stages in their careers.

Reflections on ‘Trans Sainthood in Translation, ca. 400–1500’

By Josh Allen - July 1, 2025 (0 comments)

by Dr Mariana Bodnaruk (Masaryk University Brno), Dr Stephan Bruhn (German Historical Institute London), and Dr Michael Eber (University of Cologne)

On 22–23 May, the German Historical Institute in London hosted a conference titled ‘Trans Sainthood in Translation, ca. 400–1500’. Seventeen presenters from eight countries covered the translations and artistic depictions of the lives of the so-called monachoparthenoi. According to their legends, these saints were assigned female gender at birth but lived as monks in male monasteries. While most of their vitae originated in the Greek-speaking regions of the Late Antique Eastern Mediterranean, versions of their stories appear to have circulated in almost every Late Antique and Medieval Christian community. The conference focused on the five monachoparthenoi who received full-length biographies in both Greek and Latin (Eugenia*us, Euphrosyne*Smaragdus, Marina*us, Pelagia*us and Theodora*us), but papers also covered these vitae as they appear in Syriac, Coptic, Ge’ez, Church Slavonic, Old English, Old French, Middle High German and Old Norse. Visual depictions and relics from Constantinople, Cyprus, Palestine, the Balkans, Rome and Iberia were also explored (the programme is available here).

Although the stories were literary constructions written mainly by monastic authors, they had an original historical core and a long oral tradition. Evidence of historical gender-crossing is reflected in other sources from the Middle Ages and early modern times, such as monastic anecdotes, hagiographic iconography, and church and state laws. These narratives and images furnished models that shaped the gender subjectivities of their readers and viewers. While the stories of our five saints are fictional, they were not created or read as such in the Middle Ages and beyond. In their late antique contexts of production, as well as in their later translations and reception by Christian audiences across the broader Mediterranean and Europe, these texts were perceived as recounting “true” stories. Transgender saints were not only “real” to believers; they also received embodiment and possessed materiality through icons, shrines, and especially relics, such as those of Pelagia*us and Eugenia*us, the earliest and most popular of this group. It is this transmateriality of the gender-crossing saints, and the hopes the faithful connected with them as intercessors, that the conference participants discussed.

Some researchers have taken the ubiquity of these trans masculine saints as a sign of their insignificance. Until very recently, those few who had studied them did so almost exclusively within the limiting and pathologising framework of ‘transvestism’ or ‘cross-dressing’. By contrast, over the course of two days of lively discussion, a wide range of approaches to these saints emerged (which cannot be easily summarised here). While many authors, translators, scribes and artists working with these saints were keen to impose cisness and erase trans readings — by changing pronouns, erasing masculine names from manuscripts or depicting saints as nuns rather than monks — this erasure was never fully successful. Even in the most transphobic rewritings and depictions, our presenters usually found some evidence of slippage, suggesting that the authors and artists were, on some level, aware that treating these saints as ‘actually women the whole time’ simply does not work. Additionally, from Ethiopia to Italy to Iceland, we found many traditions that treated the saints’ monastic trans masculinity as a matter of fact rather than something that needed to be explained away.

It was not lost on any of us that this conference took place only a month after the Equality and Human Rights Commission had issued some guidance that essentially comes down to segregating trans people from public life: According to the guidance, it can supposedly be lawful to exclude trans people from all single-sex facilities. This meant that, at a conference covering a millennium of continuous presence of trans monks in ‘single sex facilities’ – i.e. monasteries –, many of our presenters could not be sure that there was any bathroom that they were technically allowed to use. While our small conference certainly doesn’t have the same reach as the EHRC, not to mention the global network of transphobic activists, we still hope that it has contributed to a counter-narrative that aids the fight for trans rights.

This conference was co-sponsored by the Past & Present Society, the Hagiography Society, the German Historical Institute, and the German Research Foundation (DFG).

Past & Present was pleased to support this event and supports other events like it. Applications for event funding are welcomed from scholars working in the field of historical studies at all stages in their careers.

The "Immobility" Past & Present Virtual Issue

By Josh Allen - June 28, 2025 (0 comments)

by the Past & Present editorial team

Three of the 2023-25 Past and Present postdoctoral fellows Drs. Lamin Manneh, Ana Struillou and Malika Zehni (Institute of Historical Research, London) have edited a virtual issue of the journal on the subject of Immobility.

In their introduction they explain that:

“Increasingly, since the early years of the twenty-first century, some have questioned the relevance of historians’ ‘fetishization of mobility’ in an era of closing borders. This has led to greater attention being placed on systems of ‘regulation and intervention’ that shape global migration. Shifting away from the narratives centred on movement and fluidity, we argue that immobility is not a mere lack of movement: it is about the power relations and barriers that enforce, experience, and resist stillness. By delving into the archives of Past and Present, we aim to construct a conversation around the processes of enforcing, experiencing, and challenging immobility. We have found that immobility shapes the experiences of both the historical actors found in the journal and the historians and scholars who write these histories.”

Outlining the basis of their interest in the topic and why this should be a matter of interest to historians working in the contemporary moment.

Thanks to our publisher Oxford University Press all non-Open Access articles in the virtual issue are currently free to read.

If you are interested in previous virtual issues of Past & Present the full archive is avaliable here.

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Reflections upon "What have the English ever done for us? English Reformations in Early Modern Europe"

By Josh Allen - June 10, 2025 (0 comments)

by Kate Shore (Lincoln College, University of Oxford) and Dr. Fred Smith (Balliol College, University of Oxford)

What have the English ever done for us? This central question guided participants in a one-day workshop, organised by Fred Smith and Kate Shore, exploring the European impact and legacy of England’s early modern reformations. Once seen as insular and introverted, historians have increasingly come to recognise the extent to which England’s reformations, both Protestant and Catholic, developed in close and intimate dialogue with religious changes elsewhere throughout Europe. However, the history of Europe‘s many reformations and counter-reformations is still often told without much reference to England. Indeed, it is often assumed that England’s reformations had relatively little to offer their continental counterparts: as Diarmaid MacCulloch once suggested, ‘the flow of ideas in the [English] reformation seems at least at first sight to be a matter of imports from abroad, with an emphatically unfavourable balance of payments.’ The workshop, held in Balliol College, Oxford, on 27 March 2025, sought to interrogate this narrative by bringing together an international group of historians, literary scholars and theologians.

Over the course of 12 papers and lively discussion, a number of things became clear. The first was the extent to which England’s reformations were a topic of considerable interest throughout early modern Europe. Information about English events travelled quickly: Charlotte Methuen (University of Glasgow) emphasised how well-informed German Lutherans were about English affairs. Indeed, after Anne Boleyn was executed on 19 May 1536, Philipp Melanchthon was not only aware of the event but also passing on details in correspondence only ten days later. English reformations captured the imagination of their wider European peers and were integrated into the literary traditions of other countries. Tadhg Ó hAnnracháin (University College Dublin) brought to life the Italian tale of Il Cappuccino Scozzese by Giovanni Battista Rinuccini (1592-1653), which used a fictionalised life of George Leslie, a Scottish Capuchin monk, to unpick the tensions of religious conversion and familial relationships. Deborah Forteza (Covenant College, Georgia, USA) explored the different ways in which the tale of Henry VIII appeared in Spanish literature, from history writing to comedic plays. There was engagement with English reformations as far afield as Greece: Anatasia Stylianou (Humfrey Wanley Visiting Fellow at the Bodleian Library) detailed the exploits of Venetian Greek Nikandros Noukios (c. 1500-1556) who came to England and wrote a Greek account of the early English reformation.

Many of the papers also underlined the dense networks of connections linking England with Europe. James Kelly (University of Durham) spoke about those English Catholics who joined religious orders on the continent, whilst Morten Fink-Jensen (The Saxo Institute, Copenhagen) drew out the Anglo-Danish connection: Miles Coverdale received a very warm welcome in Denmark in 1555 and, in the seventeenth century, the University of Oxford was the place to study for future Danish theologians and politicians.

English reformations, then, were far from unknown on the continent. However, many papers went further by considering the extent to which such communications networks and perceptions helped inform religious change in Europe. A recurring theme tackled by many of the papers was just how difficult it is to pin down ‘influence’ – a problem confronted head on by Dorothea Wendebourg (Humboldt Universität, Berlin) in her paper exploring the influence of the English Reformation in the Holy Roman Empire. As Wendebourg explained, the role of German reformers in shaping the contours of English reformations is well-known and extensive. However, all relationships, no matter how imbalanced, are at least to some extent reciprocal we just have to approach the question of ‘influence’ more omnivorously. In particular, Wendebourg underlined the importance of looking beyond a traditional focus on theological influence (English reformations were, undeniably, somewhat derivative of European ideas in this sphere) to consider instead the European significance of England’s reformations in more liturgical, ecclesiological and administrative senses. Once we do this, she argued, we can begin to see German reformers engaging more creatively and constructively with English ideas. This was an idea taken up by Kate Shore (Lincoln College, Oxford) in her paper, which explored the printing and circulation of German and Latin translations of Thomas Cranmer‘s writings, especially the Edwardian Order of Communion (1548). Meanwhile, Fred Smith (Balliol College, Oxford) underlined the significance of Mary I’s programme of Protestant persecution for informing French approaches to heresy in the 1550s: the French Cardinal, Charles de Guise, consciously appropriated aspects of the Marian inquisitorial campaign‘s structural organisation for use in France. Several of the participants also stressed that the influence of the English Reformation on Europe was not limited to the sixteenth century: Fink-Jensen, Wendebourg and Shore, for example, all stressed the importance of English Puritan writings for German and Danish proto-pietism in the seventeenth century and beyond.

However, perhaps the theme that came through most strongly across many of the papers was the profound European influence of English reformations in a more rhetorical sense – the power of ‘The English Reformation as a narrative to conjure with. Wendebourg, for example, underlined the importance of that narrative for German reformers for whom the success of Protestantism outside Germany proved the catholicity and thus legitimacy of their reformation. The rhetorical force of the English Reformation was perhaps at its most potent in relation to martyrdom. Mirosława Hanusiewicz-Lavallee (John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Poland) discussed the reception of English martyrs in Poland-Lithuania. Lacking their own martyrological tradition, Polish translators repurposed English martyrological narratives, particularly those of John Foxe and Edmund Campion. Anne Dillon (Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge) echoed Hanusiewicz-Lavallee’s thoughts for the Spanish context: lacking their own continuity of martyr witness, Spanish charterhouses decorated their interiors with paintings of English martyrs. Meanwhile, James Kelly emphasised that English monasteries and convents in continental Europe became a powerful representation of the persecuted church on one’s doorstep. This gave such communities a powerful religio-cultural caché which helped them become standard bearers of Catholic reform. Katy Gibbons (University of Portsmouth) reflected on the ways in which European narratives also shaped the identity of English martyrs: Thomas Percy’s political involvement in the Northern Rebellion of 1569 made him an uncomfortable figure of veneration for English Catholics, but, in the rest of Europe, he could be sanitised and added to the tales of English Protestant persecution. Gibbons also emphasised the importance of the networks of religious orders in amplifying the stories of English martyrs. Details could be lost in translation, but the narratives of the English Reformation, with its tales of life and death, became a powerful tool and shorthand in the literature, religious writings and art of early modern Europe.

Ultimately, what the workshop really highlighted is that, despite its location on the geographical periphery, England was an important part of European conversations about religious change. By changing our frame of reference and looking at the English Reformation through European eyes, we can not only gain a new understanding of the English Reformation itself – its significance, idiosyncrasies and legacybut also encourage historians to think more carefully about the ways in which religious ideas propagate, interact and merge.

Past & Present was pleased to support this event and supports other events like it. Applications for event funding are welcomed from scholars working in the field of historical studies at all stages in their careers.
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Past & Present logo, 2017 all rights reserved