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Catholic Use of Anglo-Saxon Precedents, 1565–1625
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2015
Extract
The study of antiquarianism and particularly of the use of Anglo-Saxon precedents in England in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries has belonged primarily to historians of Protestantism and parliament, to their studies of English Protestant antiquarians and English Protestant theories of common law, royal absolutism, constitutionalism, Laudian Anglicanism, and non-conforming Protestant resistance. Although it has been clear to everyone that Protestant interest in Saxonism was part and parcel of an anti-Catholic agenda, the Catholic side of this discourse has been virtually unexamined. The focus almost exclusively on Protestant Saxonism has isolated even Protestant thought from some of the contexts within which it developed and, more obviously, has all but occluded the importance of Saxonism to a range of Catholic arguments.
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References
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37 Broughton also repeated ideas that Persons had emphasized in his Answere to … Coke, namely that Queen Elizabeth had held Catholic views, would not have shifted the country to Protestantism had she not feared the Pope’s charge of bastardy, and ‘would have lived a Catholike, but for her over-ruling Protestant Counsaile’ (A8v-Blr).
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42 In 1619 and 1625, Heigham also published A fortress of the faith, Stapleton’s companion piece to his translation of Bede’s History, while other presses printed some of his Latin works. For Stapleton’s Latin works printed in this period, see Allison, and Rogers, , The Contemporary Printed Literature of the English Counter-Reformation, 1. 1129, 1207, 1208, 1209.Google Scholar
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45 In this work, Lisle reprinted the sermon by ÆElfric (originally printed by Parker, and which Foxe had reprinted in Saxon characters in Acts and monuments), as well as another work he incorrectly assumed was by the jElfric that Leland, Parker, and Foxe had resurrected. Cogswell did not include Lisle’s The Saxon treatise in his study of responses to Charles’s return.
46 Broughton had also written An Ecclesiastical Protestant Historie, of the high pastoral and fatherly chardge and care of the popes of Rome over the church of Britanie, from the first planting of the Christian faith there by St. Peter (n. p., 1624), a history that began with St. Peter and ended just as the Saxons came into Britain, and was guided by the thesis that throughout British history archbishops had sought authority from Rome.
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