Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Preface
- List of contributors
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction The 1590s: the second reign of Elizabeth I?
- 1 The patronage of the crown in Elizabethan politics: the 1590s in perspective
- 2 Regnum Cecilianum? A Cecilian perspective of the Court
- 3 Patronage at Court, faction and the earl of Essex
- 4 Peers, patronage and the politics of history
- 5 The fall of Sir John Perrot
- 6 The Elizabethan establishment and the ecclesiastical polity
- 7 Ecclesiastical vitriol: religious satire in the 1590s and the invention of puritanism
- 8 Ecclesiastical vitriol: the kirk, the puritans and the future king of England
- 9 Social strain and social dislocation, 1585–1603
- 10 Lord of Liberty: Francis Davison and the cult of Elizabeth
- 11 The complaint of poetry for the death of liberality: the decline of literary patronage in the 1590s
- 12 Summer's Last Will and Testament: revels' end
- 13 The theatre and the Court in the 1590s
- Index
6 - The Elizabethan establishment and the ecclesiastical polity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Preface
- List of contributors
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction The 1590s: the second reign of Elizabeth I?
- 1 The patronage of the crown in Elizabethan politics: the 1590s in perspective
- 2 Regnum Cecilianum? A Cecilian perspective of the Court
- 3 Patronage at Court, faction and the earl of Essex
- 4 Peers, patronage and the politics of history
- 5 The fall of Sir John Perrot
- 6 The Elizabethan establishment and the ecclesiastical polity
- 7 Ecclesiastical vitriol: religious satire in the 1590s and the invention of puritanism
- 8 Ecclesiastical vitriol: the kirk, the puritans and the future king of England
- 9 Social strain and social dislocation, 1585–1603
- 10 Lord of Liberty: Francis Davison and the cult of Elizabeth
- 11 The complaint of poetry for the death of liberality: the decline of literary patronage in the 1590s
- 12 Summer's Last Will and Testament: revels' end
- 13 The theatre and the Court in the 1590s
- Index
Summary
‘Where there is quietness, there is not the truth.’ This had been Hugh Latimer's riposte to Cardinal Pole's appeal for religious peace in Mary Tudor's reign. Whatever one supposes the religion of protestants to have been, disputation and controversy were its lifeblood. It might seem on the surface that the 1590s were a period of relative religious peace, at least when compared to the 1550s, the 1570s and the 1580s. Membership of the political élite was effectively limited to protestants, since avowed Catholics were excluded from Parliament and the commissions of the peace. The erosion of parish Catholicism was virtually complete. The Prayer Book of 1559 had won general acceptance, and the missions of the Catholic seminarians and Jesuits had largely been confounded. At the other end of the spectrum, the organized puritan movement had been decisively routed.
Yet appearances are deceptive. As the first generation of Elizabethan bishops died in the 1580s, they were replaced by a different species: more rigidly authoritarian conformists led by John Whitgift whom the queen preferred to Canterbury in 1583. Whereas the careers of the first generation episcopate had been shaped in the same mould as the moderate puritans, those of the second generation derived from the polemical attack on presbyterianism and external church government out of scripture which the Admonition Controversy had ignited in the 1570s. The result was that jure Divino theses of monarchy and episcopacy were increasingly voiced in pulpit and press after 1589.
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- Information
- The Reign of Elizabeth ICourt and Culture in the Last Decade, pp. 126 - 149Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995
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