The Church of England and Christian Antiquity: The Construction of a Confessional Identity in the 17th Century: Oxford-Warburg Studies
Autor Jean-Louis Quantinen Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 feb 2009
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780199557868
ISBN-10: 0199557861
Pagini: 518
Dimensiuni: 148 x 223 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.77 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford-Warburg Studies
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0199557861
Pagini: 518
Dimensiuni: 148 x 223 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.77 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford-Warburg Studies
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Quantin tells this complex, ironic story with cosmopolitan learning, a sharp, ironic wit, and a fine English style. A TLS Book of the Year.
A work of great style and even greater scholarship, in which Quantin demolishes the Anglo-Catholic myth of a 'distinctive' Anglican identity based upon monolithic respect for early patristic teaching and apparently consolidated in the 17th century. Anglican apologists should read and take note.
Magisterial work... has any English scholar deconstructed the myth of Anglicanism with such formidable sweep and erudition?
This substantial and deeply learned work is a milestone publication which ought to be recommended reading for any historian working on the history of religious ideas, on the history of erudition and the nature of religious change in the long seventeenth century in the British Isles... Quantin's book beautifully composed and profoundly reflective deserves a very broad readership.
Jean-Louis Quantin has written with the utmost care on the place of patristics in early Anglican identity-formation... a book that anyone interested in scholarship "of the Christian past" or in the continual reinvention of the Anglican past should read.
Readers of this volume cannot help but be impressed at Quantin's mastery of the sources and prodigious multi-lingual reading around the subject. Quantin's contribution to the field is most welcome...a formidable and well-produced piece of research
This book is an erudite account of how the Church of England received, interpreted, and respected the testimony of Christian antiquity from the archiepiscopate of Thomas Cranmer to the Glorious Revolution of 1688.
Quantin's scope and achievement is vast.
A much-needed addition to our understanding of the early modern Church of England. It is built on extremely detailed research, and the author seems impressively comfortable discussing the whole period covered.
Quantin's achievement in this book...is remarkable...a magnificent and valuable book
A magisterial study of seventeenth century patristic scholarship.
Splendid...Quantin's study has important contributions to make in a number of disparate fields...likely to remain the starting-point for further enquiry into the subject for many years
Quantin has written a valuable and challenging text of use to all engaged in the task of defining and assessing the character of the Church of England and its global Anglican variations.
a carefully researched study
Quantin's work is a vital addition to the library of any scholar who wants to understand a crucial period of Anglican myth-making. The image of the Anglican patristic scholar is still very much alive and we all have much to be grateful to Quantin for so clearly charting its creation.
A work of great style and even greater scholarship, in which Quantin demolishes the Anglo-Catholic myth of a 'distinctive' Anglican identity based upon monolithic respect for early patristic teaching and apparently consolidated in the 17th century. Anglican apologists should read and take note.
Magisterial work... has any English scholar deconstructed the myth of Anglicanism with such formidable sweep and erudition?
This substantial and deeply learned work is a milestone publication which ought to be recommended reading for any historian working on the history of religious ideas, on the history of erudition and the nature of religious change in the long seventeenth century in the British Isles... Quantin's book beautifully composed and profoundly reflective deserves a very broad readership.
Jean-Louis Quantin has written with the utmost care on the place of patristics in early Anglican identity-formation... a book that anyone interested in scholarship "of the Christian past" or in the continual reinvention of the Anglican past should read.
Readers of this volume cannot help but be impressed at Quantin's mastery of the sources and prodigious multi-lingual reading around the subject. Quantin's contribution to the field is most welcome...a formidable and well-produced piece of research
This book is an erudite account of how the Church of England received, interpreted, and respected the testimony of Christian antiquity from the archiepiscopate of Thomas Cranmer to the Glorious Revolution of 1688.
Quantin's scope and achievement is vast.
A much-needed addition to our understanding of the early modern Church of England. It is built on extremely detailed research, and the author seems impressively comfortable discussing the whole period covered.
Quantin's achievement in this book...is remarkable...a magnificent and valuable book
A magisterial study of seventeenth century patristic scholarship.
Splendid...Quantin's study has important contributions to make in a number of disparate fields...likely to remain the starting-point for further enquiry into the subject for many years
Quantin has written a valuable and challenging text of use to all engaged in the task of defining and assessing the character of the Church of England and its global Anglican variations.
a carefully researched study
Quantin's work is a vital addition to the library of any scholar who wants to understand a crucial period of Anglican myth-making. The image of the Anglican patristic scholar is still very much alive and we all have much to be grateful to Quantin for so clearly charting its creation.
Notă biografică
Jean-Louis Quantin was born on 20 August 1967 and studied at the Ecole Normale Supérieure and the Sorbonne in Paris (D.Phil 1994; Habilitation 2003). He was a junior research fellow at the Maison Française in Oxford in 1993-1995, and was subsequently lecturer in early modern history at the University of Versailles in 1995-2002. Since 2002 he is professor at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (Sorbonne, Paris), Faculty of Historical and philological sciences, where he holds the chair of history of early modern scholarship, which was created for him. He was a Yates fellow at the Warburg Institute and a Visiting Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford. He has published extensively on early modern religious history. He is a fellow of the Accademia di San Carlo in Milan.