A Companion to Tudor BritainRobert Tittler, Norman L. Jones A Companion to Tudor Britain provides an authoritative overview of historical debates about this period, focusing on the whole British Isles.
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Page xiv
... Ireland, Galway. His publications include Tudor Ireland: Crown Community and the Conflict of Cultures 1470-1603; Tudor Frontiers and Noble Power: the Making ofthe British State; and Ireland in the Age of the Tudors: English Expansion ...
... Ireland, Galway. His publications include Tudor Ireland: Crown Community and the Conflict of Cultures 1470-1603; Tudor Frontiers and Noble Power: the Making ofthe British State; and Ireland in the Age of the Tudors: English Expansion ...
Page 2
... Ireland, as well as of those areas which were nominally and formally a part of the kingdoms of Scotland and England, such as the border country and the Isles, but which were not effectively governed by either. Wales had been annexed by ...
... Ireland, as well as of those areas which were nominally and formally a part of the kingdoms of Scotland and England, such as the border country and the Isles, but which were not effectively governed by either. Wales had been annexed by ...
Page 3
... Ireland and Wales. As David Cannadine and others have pointed out, the energy expended by English historians from the 1970s to the 1990s on some of the newer methodologies was not mirrored by most historians of Scotland, Wales or Ireland ...
... Ireland and Wales. As David Cannadine and others have pointed out, the energy expended by English historians from the 1970s to the 1990s on some of the newer methodologies was not mirrored by most historians of Scotland, Wales or Ireland ...
Page 10
... Ireland and the first stirring of North American settlement. One way to think about government and politics is to explore structures. This still useful approach was exemplified by the work of G. R. Elton, whose 'points of contact ...
... Ireland and the first stirring of North American settlement. One way to think about government and politics is to explore structures. This still useful approach was exemplified by the work of G. R. Elton, whose 'points of contact ...
Page 78
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Contents
1 | |
7 | |
Part II Belief | 201 |
Part III People and Groups | 307 |
Part IV Culture | 401 |
Bibliography | 526 |
Index | 563 |
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1ames 1ohn authority bishops borough Britain British Isles burghs Cambridge Catholic centre chamber chantries church civic conflict Court crown culture difficult dissolution drama earl Early Modern England early Tudor economic Edinburgh Edward elite Elizabeth Elizabeth’s reign Elizabethan England English English Reformation fifteenth figures financial find first five France French Gaelic gentry guilds Henry VIII Henry’s historians History household houses Iames influence institutions Iohn Ireland Irish king king’s kingdom kirk land livery companies London Lord marriage Mary Mary of Guise Mary’s medieval monarchs office officers officials ofthe Oxford parish parishioners parliament patronage play political population portraits privy council Protestant Protestantism queen reflected Reformation religion religious Renaissance role royal Scotland Scots Scottish Scottish Reformation significant sixteenth century social Society Thomas Thomas Cromwell tion Tittler towns traditional Tudor dynasty Tudor England Tudor period urban Welsh William Wolsey women