Intolerance in the reign of Elizabeth, Queen of England
240 pages
English

Intolerance in the reign of Elizabeth, Queen of England

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240 pages
English
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Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 10 Mo

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Elizabeth, of England*Dueeit By Arthur KleinJay y^ x^ «Q v^ *% v^ v^ v^v^ »Q v% v^ v% v% vs£ >o£ vg£ vg£ l|>0 «o ^ x5s 'W0•• V ffiPB 19•'.•-Air •*.•'•'• -•••.•' • »••••'*-• •-•' •.' \ HP '^ISSHhkM OCT -01917 1917BR 756 .K6 1884-Klein, Arthur Jay, Intolerance in the reign of Queen of EnglandElizabeth, Intolerance in the Reign of Elizabeth INTOLERANCE IN THE REIGN OF divert) Queen Englandof By Arthur Klein, Professor ofJay History in Wheaton College, Norton, Massachusetts. boston & new tork Houghton Mifflin Company The Riverside Press Cambridge M.DCCCC.XVII KLEINCOPYRIGHT, 1917, BY ARTHUR JAY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Published February 1Q17 PREFACE thisIn the preparation of study the writer has attempted to make the text interesting and intelligible the averageto reader. He has, therefore, relegated the dry bones and paraphernalia of study to the footnotes and a bibliograph- ical The isappendix. material for the reign of Elizabeth so voluminous, however, that footnotes and bibliography are not complete. The footnotes do not represent all the material upon which statements in the text are based, but the writer believes that the authorities given amply sup- port the opinions and conclusions there expressed." />

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1917BR 756 .K6
1884-Klein, Arthur Jay,
Intolerance in the reign of
Queen of EnglandElizabeth,Intolerance in the Reign of ElizabethINTOLERANCE
IN THE REIGN OF
divert)
Queen Englandof
By Arthur Klein, Professor ofJay History
in Wheaton College, Norton, Massachusetts.
boston & new tork
Houghton Mifflin Company
The Riverside Press Cambridge
M.DCCCC.XVIIKLEINCOPYRIGHT, 1917, BY ARTHUR JAY
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Published February 1Q17PREFACE
thisIn the preparation of study the writer has attempted
to make the text interesting and intelligible the averageto
reader. He has, therefore, relegated the dry bones and
paraphernalia of study to the footnotes and a bibliograph-
ical The isappendix. material for the reign of Elizabeth
so voluminous, however, that footnotes and bibliography
are not complete. The footnotes do not represent all the
material upon which statements in the text are based, but
the writer believes that the authorities given amply sup-
port the opinions and conclusions there expressed.
In selecting material for the footnotes from the vast
amount of published and unpublished source matter col-
lected in the preparation of this essay, the author has con-
fined the references for themost part to afew representative
men and collections of sources. The works of Jewel, Parker,
Whitgift, Hooker, and Cartwright, the Zurich Letters and
the Domestic State Papers, have, for instance, been chosen
as most representative and easily available to the general
reader. Unless otherwise noted, however, the author has
depended upon the manuscripts in the Record Office and
not theupon Calendar the Domestic Stateof Papers, since the
Calendar, especially for the earlier years of Elizabeth's
reign, is often so condensed as to give inadequate informa-
tion. The representative sources selected have been given
so as to make as complete as possible, within the limits of
this study, the facts and opinions presented by them.
Other sources have been given whenever those chosen as
most representative were lacking or were not of sufficient
weight.
The sources used consist of the laws, Parliamentary
debates, acts of Council, proclamations, public and privatePrefacevi
papers, correspondence, sermons, diaries, controversial
inworks, and foreign comment. References the footnotes to
works been reduced to theminimum for thesecondary have
sake of the appearance of the printed page, but the writer
has tried to express his sense of obligation to the work of
Bibliographical Appendix. It is hoped that theothers in the
Appendix will serve the further purpose of assisting the
American student, about to enter upon a study of Eliza-
ecclesiastical and religious history, find his inbethan to way
somewhat confusing mass of the literature of the period.the
remains the pleasant duty of expressing myThere
gratitude to the officials of the Public Record Office and
of the British Museum for their courteous and painstaking
assistance. To the Reverend Mr. Claude Jenkins, of the
Palace Library, who took the time to teach anLambeth
American stranger how to read and handle the documents
of the period, I owe one of my most^pleasant memories of
Englishmen. To Miss Cornelia T. Hudson,England and of
reference assistant in the Library of Union Theological
Seminary, I wish to express my thanks for friendly help
courtesy with which I have met inin excess of the official
libraries I have consulted. The mere acknowledg-all the
ment of my debt of gratitude to Professor James T. Shot-
well, of Columbia University, and to Professor William
Rockwell, of Union Theological Seminary, must nec-Walker
essarily express inadequately the value of the encourage-
ment, the suggestions, and the hours of labor which they
The kindness of Professorhave so freely given. Edward
Cheyney, of the University of Pennsylvania, in readingP.
and criticizing the completed manuscript, and the help in
given Professorreading the proof by F. Foakes Jackson,J.
of Union Theological Seminary, have assisted materially in
making the essay more readable.
Arthur Klein.J.

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