The Shaping of a Community: The Rise and Reformation of the English Parish, C.1400-1560This book offers a new perspective to the current debate about popular religious attitudes in Tudor England, laying particular emphasis on the social and secular dimensions of parish life. The argument focuses on the role of the laity and especially on the office of churchwarden. It assesses the rising levels of parish income, the importance of the social context for fund-raising strategies, and the growing expenditure on priests, voluntary activities and administrative duties. The final part discusses the Reformation-related reduction in religious options and the intensifying trend towards oligarchical parish regimes and official local government responsibilities. Wherever possible, the English situation is put into sharper focus by comparisons with local ecclesiastical life on the Continent and appendices provide a detailed financial analysis for a large number of parishes. |
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Page 151
... fraternities were ' predominantly a " middle class " artisan movement ' . " And yet there were prestigious top - flight institutions such as the Holy Trinity gild at Coventry or the St George fraternity at Norwich with a very ...
... fraternities were ' predominantly a " middle class " artisan movement ' . " And yet there were prestigious top - flight institutions such as the Holy Trinity gild at Coventry or the St George fraternity at Norwich with a very ...
Page 153
... fraternities , 28 and at places like Baslow in Derbyshire or Weymouth in Dorset , brotherhoods of neighbours erected chapels because of the inconvenient distance from the mother church.29 As a means to relieve inflexible social or ...
... fraternities , 28 and at places like Baslow in Derbyshire or Weymouth in Dorset , brotherhoods of neighbours erected chapels because of the inconvenient distance from the mother church.29 As a means to relieve inflexible social or ...
Page 154
... fraternities and the parochial clergy cannot be substantiated ' , that the large majority of gilds were firmly based within and working for the parish . For a start , they shared the same orthodox belief in sacraments and intercession ...
... fraternities and the parochial clergy cannot be substantiated ' , that the large majority of gilds were firmly based within and working for the parish . For a start , they shared the same orthodox belief in sacraments and intercession ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Community of the Parish 13 33 | 13 |
Tables | 33 |
Copyright | |
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administration Altars Andrew Hubbard Ashburton Ashburton CWA assessment Botolph Aldersgate Botolph CWA Boxford Boxford CWA Bristol Burgess Cambridge ceremonial Chantry Certificates chapel Chapter Church and Society churchwardens clergy clerks collections communal contributions court Court Leet Croscombe Crown CWA Per cent Devon Duffy early ecclesiastical Edward Edward VI endowments English Reformation entry entry entry evidence example expenditure fifteenth century figures fraternities gilds Haigh Halesowen ibid institutions John Lambeth CWA Lancashire late medieval Lay Subsidy Legal costs London manor manorial Mary-at-Hill Medieval England Medieval Parish Merry England Morebath obits officers old pence ornaments parish accounts parish assembly parish church Parish finance parishioners parochial payments period Peterborough Poor relief Pre-Refo pre-Reformation Prescot priests records rector religious rents revenues rural Saints CWA secular sixteenth social Somerset St Botolph St Botolph Aldersgate St Edmund St Ewen's St Mary studies subparochial Suffolk surviving Thomas tithes town Tudor vestry vicar village Yatton