FREE SHIPPING BOTH WAYS
ON EVERY ORDER!
LIST PRICE:
$52.21

OUR PRICE:
$20.67

You may extend rentals at any time.


Sources and Debates in English History, 1485-1714

ISBN: 9781405162760 | 1405162767
Edition: 2nd
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Pub. Date: 2/2/2009

Why Rent from Knetbooks?

Because Knetbooks knows college students. Our rental program is designed to save you time and money. Whether you need a textbook for a semester, quarter or even a summer session, we have an option for you. Simply select a rental period, enter your information and your book will be on its way!

Top 5 reasons to order all your textbooks from Knetbooks:

  • We have the lowest prices on thousands of popular textbooks
  • Free shipping both ways on ALL orders
  • Most orders ship within 48 hours
  • Need your book longer than expected? Extending your rental is simple
  • Our customer support team is always here to help
SummaryTable of ContentsAuthor Biography
Designed to accompany the survey text Early Modern England, 1485-1714: a Narrative History, this updated and substantially revised sourcebook guides students through an impressive array of documents from the Tudor-Stuart period.The new edition is enhanced with 50 new documents, and new explanatory headnotes, biographical background, and study questions. Each chapter includes a Historians' Debates bibliography with the latest articles and essays as well as a section listing additional source collections, both of which help students engage in fur... MORE
... MORE
List of Documentsp. vii
List of Platesp. xiv
Prefacep. xv
Acknowledgmentsp. xviii
Abbreviationsp. xix
Social Order and Tensions in Tudor Englandp. 1
Great Chain of Beingp. 2
Social Order, Social Change, and the Statep. 9
Foreigners View English Societyp. 16
Historians' Debatesp. 19
Additional Source Collectionsp. 21
Reviving the Crown, Empowering the State: the Tudor Challengep. 22
Edward IV, Richard III, and the Reassertion of Royal Powerp. 24
Claiming the Throne: Richard III, Henry VIII, and the Pretendersp. 28
Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolseyp. 37
Tudor Revolutions in England, Wales, and Ireland?p. 41
Historians' Debatesp. 46
Additional Source Collectionsp. 48
Religious Reformationsp. 49
The Old Church Remembered, Criticized, and Defendedp. 50
Henry VIII's Great Matterp. 55
The New Church Establishedp. 57
Conservative Reactionp. 62
Protestant vs. Catholic under Edward VI, Mary I, and Elizabeth Ip. 65
Historians' Debatesp. 74
Additional Source Collectionsp. 77
Elizabethan Worldsp. 78
Imperial Ambitions; Geopolitical Realitiesp. 78
Between Jesuits and Puritansp. 90
Elizabethan Performancesp. 96
Historians' Debatesp. 105
Additional Source Collectionsp. 108
Masterless Men and the Monstrous Regiment of Womenp. 109
Rough Music, Food Riots, and Popular Rebellionsp. 109
Good Wife, Bad Wife, Poor Wife, Witchp. 119
Poor Laws and the Reform of Popular Culturep. 127
Historians' Debatesp. 133
Additional Source Collectionsp. 136
Early Stuart Church and Statep. 137
Divine Right of Kings and Ancient Constitutionalismp. 137
Puritans and Anti-Puritansp. 142
The Crisis of Parliamentsp. 148
The Personal Rulep. 158
The Constitution Reformed or Deformed?p. 160
Historians' Debatesp. 167
Additional Source Collectionsp. 170
Civil War and Revolutionp. 171
War and Reaction in the Three British Kingdomsp. 171
Constitutional Experiments, Regicide, and Reconfigurationp. 184
Radicals, Sectaries, and Revolving New Notionsp. 193
Historians' Debatesp. 203
Additional Source Collectionsp. 206
Religion, Restoration, and Revolutionp. 208
Dissenters, Catholics, and the Church of Englandp. 208
Whig vs. Toryp. 219
James II, William of Orange, and the Revolution of 1688-9p. 229
Historians' Debatesp. 237
Additional Source Collectionsp. 240
Later Stuart Politics, Thought, and Societyp. 241
Revolution Settlements Debatedp. 241
The Rage of Partyp. 259
Landed Interest versus Monied Interest, and the Reformation of Ideasp. 266
Historians' Debatesp. 278
Additional Source Collectionsp. 280
Bibliography of Online Document Archivesp. 282
Indexp. 285
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.
Newton Key is Professor of History at Eastern Illinois University. He has written articles on preaching, on feasting, on charity, and on provincial and metropolitan politicking in Stuart England and Wales. He is currently at work on a study of patrician/plebeian politics in seventeenth and eighteenth-century London.

Robert Bucholz is Professor of History at Loyola University of Chicago. He is the author of The Augustan Court: Queen Anne and the Decline of Court Culture (1993) and, with Sir John Sainty, Officials of the Royal Household 1660–1837 (2 volumes, 1997–8). He has written articles on Queen Anne and the court.



Please wait while this item is added to your cart...