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Catholic Communities in Protestant States

Britain and the Netherlands C.1570–1720

Benjamin Kaplan Bob Moore Professor Henk van Nierop Prof Dr. Judith Pollmann

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Hardback

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English
Manchester University Press
02 February 2009
This volume compares the position of Catholic minorities in England and the Dutch Republic. Looking beyond the tales of persecution that have dominated traditional historiography, the contributors focus on the realities of Catholic existence.

Thematically organised, the book explores Catholicism as a minority culture that resorted to unorthodox means, both to retain its own identity, and to survive in a hostile political environment. It examines ritual, material culture, international networks, and above all relations: between laity and clergy, men and women, Catholics and ProtestantsBy highlighting differences as well as similarities between the English and Dutch experiences, Catholic communities in Protestant states will help both undergraduate readers and specialists to rethink the history of Catholicism and the consequences of minority status for religious communities. -- .
Edited by:   , , ,
Series edited by:  
Imprint:   Manchester University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm,  Spine: 17mm
Weight:   585g
ISBN:   9780719079061
ISBN 10:   0719079063
Series:   Studies in Early Modern European History
Pages:   288
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  ELT Advanced ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1. Shifting identities in hostile settings: towards a comparison of the Catholic communities in early modern Britain and the Northern Netherlands – Willem Frijhoff 2. Cooperative Confessionalisation: lay-clerical collaboration in Dutch Catholic Communities during the Golden Age – Charles H. Parker 3. ‘So they become contemptible’: clergy and laity in a mission territory – Michael Mullett 4. Integration vs. segregation: religiously mixed marriage and the `Verzuiling’ model of Dutch society – Benjamin J. Kaplan 5. ‘Getting on’ and ‘getting along’ in parish and town: Catholics and their neighbours in England – William Sheils 6. Burying the dead; reliving the past: ritual, resentment and sacred space in the Dutch Republic – Judith Pollmann 7. Beads, books and bare ruined choirs: transmutations of Catholic ritual life in Protestant England – Alexandra Walsham 8. The southern Netherlands connection: networks of support and patronage – Paul Arblaster 9. Priests, nuns, presses and prayers: the southern Netherlands and the contours of English Catholicism – Claire Walker 10. Second-class yet self-confident: Catholics in the Dutch Generality Lands – Charles de Mooij 11.Between conflict and coexistence: the Catholic community in Ireland as a 'visible underground church' in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries – Ute Lotz-Heumann 12. Orphans and students: recruiting boys and girls for the Holland Mission – Joke Spaans 13.Harbourers and housekeepers: Catholic women in England 1570–1720 – Marie B. Rowlands 14.Paintings for clandestine Catholic churches in the Republic: typically Dutch? – Xander van Eck 15.Cultures of dissent: English Catholics and the visual arts – Richard L. Williams 16.Conclusion: Catholic communities in Protestant states, Britain and the Netherlands c.1580–1720 – Ben Kaplan and Judith Pollmann Index -- .

Benjamin J. Kaplan is Professor of Dutch History at University College London Bob Moore is Professor of Twentieth-Century European History at the University of Sheffield Henk van Nierop is Professor Emeritus of Early Modern History at the University of Amsterdam Judith Pollmann is professor of early modern Dutch history at Leiden University

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