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    Enforcing the English Reformation in Ireland

    £37.80
    £42.00
    Price-Match is available in-store for recommended titles in CCCU module handbooks
    ISBN: 9780521369947
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    AuthorMURRAY JAMES
    Pub Date21/07/2011
    BindingPaperback
    Pages376
    Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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    This text examines the efforts of the Tudor regime to implement the English Reformation in Ireland during the sixteenth century.

    This book explores the enforcement of the English Reformation in the heartland of English Ireland during the sixteenth century. Focusing on the diocese of Dublin - the central ecclesiastical unit of the Pale - James Murray explains why the various initiatives undertaken by the reforming archbishops of Dublin, and several of the Tudor viceroys, to secure the allegiance of the indigenous community to the established Church ultimately failed. Led by its clergy, the Pale's loyal colonial community ultimately rejected the Reformation and Protestantism because it perceived them to be irreconcilable with its own traditional English culture and medieval Catholic identity. Dr Murray identifies the Marian period, and the opening decade of Elizabeth I's reign, as the crucial times during which this attachment to survivalist Catholicism solidified, and became a sufficiently powerful ideological force to stand against the theological and liturgical innovations advanced by the Protestant reformers.