Being Protestant in Reformation Britain
Autor Alec Ryrieen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 iun 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198736653
ISBN-10: 0198736657
Pagini: 520
Ilustrații: 14 black and white images
Dimensiuni: 168 x 234 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198736657
Pagini: 520
Ilustrații: 14 black and white images
Dimensiuni: 168 x 234 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
...this is an immensely rewarding book...No book has ever brought early modern Protestantism ti life so vividly, so eloquently and so movingly.
Shifting the gaze from doctrine to devotion, Alec Ryrie one of the foremost historians of Britains Reformations presents us with a staggering piece of scholarship for which the term essential reading is redundant.
An important book that reflects a change of register and a shift in the tempo of Reformation studies ... a book full of riches, elegantly writter, alive with insight, quiet erudition and compassionate humour ... Being Protestant in Reformation Britain has brought to life a whole way of being. Its subjects might even feel that for once someone has done justice to their fervently held convictions and the meaning of their lives.
Ryrie's book represents a monumental achievement.
This is a book of considerable achievement and many delights; a meticulously researched work, which provides a deep insight into the religious community in Britain from the early years of the Reformation up to the beginning of the English Civil War ... This is an important, landmark book in Reformation studies.
lively and readable... It sketches an evocative, richly textured and sympathetic portrait of the lived experience of people who embraced the reformed religion in sixteenth- and seventeenth century Britain, providing us with many fresh insights into a religious culture whose hallmark was a restless intensity and dynamism designed to fend off hypocrisy, stagnation and idleness.
This is an extremely enjoyable book and an important one. Throughout, Ryrie is engaging, employing an easy conversational tone and supplying rich detail. As a result, this work should be just as accessible to students interested in religious history as it is to experts in the field. It will be valuable in teaching upper-level undergraduate courses and in graduate courses, and should be included on the reading lists of anyone wishing to specialize in early modern European religious history.
I unhesitatingly welcome this book ... I recommend [it] to all those who wish to understand how the astonishing dynamism of Protestantism influenced the day to day living of men, women, and children in this island.
This is a compelling book ... It leads us to empathise with the intensity with which his protagonists experienced their religion; to sympathise with their restless quest for assurance; and to return with new interest to old questions about the importance of this dynamic faith in reshaping the early modern world.
This book provides a comprehensive and incisive account of what it meant to lead a Protestant life in the century after the break with Rome ... Ryrie's work will certainly establish its position as a highly significant contribution to Reformation studies; this is a physically and intellectually substantial volume, constructed around a careful dialogue with a range of voices, which answers that critical question of how 'being Protestant' was a significant part of the making of the Reformation.
Shifting the gaze from doctrine to devotion, Alec Ryrie one of the foremost historians of Britains Reformations presents us with a staggering piece of scholarship for which the term essential reading is redundant.
An important book that reflects a change of register and a shift in the tempo of Reformation studies ... a book full of riches, elegantly writter, alive with insight, quiet erudition and compassionate humour ... Being Protestant in Reformation Britain has brought to life a whole way of being. Its subjects might even feel that for once someone has done justice to their fervently held convictions and the meaning of their lives.
Ryrie's book represents a monumental achievement.
This is a book of considerable achievement and many delights; a meticulously researched work, which provides a deep insight into the religious community in Britain from the early years of the Reformation up to the beginning of the English Civil War ... This is an important, landmark book in Reformation studies.
lively and readable... It sketches an evocative, richly textured and sympathetic portrait of the lived experience of people who embraced the reformed religion in sixteenth- and seventeenth century Britain, providing us with many fresh insights into a religious culture whose hallmark was a restless intensity and dynamism designed to fend off hypocrisy, stagnation and idleness.
This is an extremely enjoyable book and an important one. Throughout, Ryrie is engaging, employing an easy conversational tone and supplying rich detail. As a result, this work should be just as accessible to students interested in religious history as it is to experts in the field. It will be valuable in teaching upper-level undergraduate courses and in graduate courses, and should be included on the reading lists of anyone wishing to specialize in early modern European religious history.
I unhesitatingly welcome this book ... I recommend [it] to all those who wish to understand how the astonishing dynamism of Protestantism influenced the day to day living of men, women, and children in this island.
This is a compelling book ... It leads us to empathise with the intensity with which his protagonists experienced their religion; to sympathise with their restless quest for assurance; and to return with new interest to old questions about the importance of this dynamic faith in reshaping the early modern world.
This book provides a comprehensive and incisive account of what it meant to lead a Protestant life in the century after the break with Rome ... Ryrie's work will certainly establish its position as a highly significant contribution to Reformation studies; this is a physically and intellectually substantial volume, constructed around a careful dialogue with a range of voices, which answers that critical question of how 'being Protestant' was a significant part of the making of the Reformation.
Notă biografică
Alec Ryrie studied History and Theology at the universities of Cambridge, St Andrews, and Oxford. He is now Head of Theology and Religion and Professor of the History of Christianity at Durham University. His previous books include The Age of Reformation (2009), The Sorcerer's Tale (2008), The Origins of the Scottish Reformation (2006) and The Gospel and Henry VIII (2003).