Confessional Mobility and English Catholics in Counter-Reformation Europe

Awards:   Winner of Winner of the RefoRC Book Award 2019.
Author:   Liesbeth Corens (Lecturer in Early Modern History, British Academy Post-doctoral Fellow, University of Oxford)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198812432


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   12 December 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Confessional Mobility and English Catholics in Counter-Reformation Europe


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Awards

  • Winner of Winner of the RefoRC Book Award 2019.

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Liesbeth Corens (Lecturer in Early Modern History, British Academy Post-doctoral Fellow, University of Oxford)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.50cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 24.10cm
Weight:   0.548kg
ISBN:  

9780198812432


ISBN 10:   0198812434
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   12 December 2018
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Abbreviations List of Figures Note on the Text Introduction Part I: Distance 1: The Exile 2: The Fugitive Part II: Mobility 3: The Educational Travller 4: The Pilgrim Part III: Orientation 5: The Intercessor 6: The Record Keeper Conclusion Bibliography

Reviews

Confessional Mobility makes an important contribution to the debate around the exile period and suggests new ways of approaching the material. It is a bold venture that sheds light on the significance of those Catholics who spent time abroad in order to make a difference for those of their co-religionists who remained at home. Whether active themselves or supporting the activities of others through prayers and pilgrimages, benefactions and a raft of other actions as interpreted by Liesbeth Corens, this book helps us to shift English Catholics further away from victimhood to positive contributions to the survival of the Catholic faith. * Caroline Bowden, Queen Mary, University of London *


Confessional Mobility makes an important contribution to the debate around the exile period and suggests new ways of approaching the material. It is a bold venture that sheds light on the significance of those Catholics who spent time abroad in order to make a difference for those of their co-religionists who remained at home. Whether active themselves or supporting the activities of others through prayers and pilgrimages, benefactions and a raft of other actions as interpreted by Liesbeth Corens, this book helps us to shift English Catholics further away from victimhood to positive contributions to the survival of the Catholic faith. * Caroline Bowden, Queen Mary, University of London * Corens paints a compelling picture of a dynamic community of active agents. She realigns our view of early modern English Catholicism as an essentially mobile phenomenon, with all the characteristics that entailed. This important book is as much focussed on ideas as evidence, yet it is underpinned by archival research of the highest quality. By building a new conceptual landscape for expatriate English Catholicism, Liesbeth Corens makes a truly transformative contribution to the historiography of early modern English Catholicism and early modern religion, and this book is surely destined to become indispensable reading for scholars of confessional identities in early modern Europe. * Reviews in History *


Corens gives a solid overview of underappreciated aspects of English Catholic networks which sustained English Catholicism during a period of disruption and dislocation ... Corens has presented an excellent case for a more fluid approach to early modern English Catholicism which recognizes the ongoing exchanges between Catholics in England and their counterparts on the European mainland. This book is a timely reminder that it was people rather than institutions who sustained English Catholicism in times of trouble. * Kirsteen M. MacKenzie, European History Quarterly * Confessional Mobility makes an important contribution to the debate around the exile period and suggests new ways of approaching the material. It is a bold venture that sheds light on the significance of those Catholics who spent time abroad in order to make a difference for those of their co-religionists who remained at home. Whether active themselves or supporting the activities of others through prayers and pilgrimages, benefactions and a raft of other actions as interpreted by Liesbeth Corens, this book helps us to shift English Catholics further away from victimhood to positive contributions to the survival of the Catholic faith. * Caroline Bowden, Queen Mary, University of London * Corens paints a compelling picture of a dynamic community of active agents. She realigns our view of early modern English Catholicism as an essentially mobile phenomenon, with all the characteristics that entailed. This important book is as much focussed on ideas as evidence, yet it is underpinned by archival research of the highest quality. By building a new conceptual landscape for expatriate English Catholicism, Liesbeth Corens makes a truly transformative contribution to the historiography of early modern English Catholicism and early modern religion, and this book is surely destined to become indispensable reading for scholars of confessional identities in early modern Europe. * Reviews in History * an important contribution ... It presents a convincing case for the vitality of English Catholicism in the late seventeenth century and for an expanded understanding of expatriate Catholics. It shines new light on the subject of early modern migration, and future scholarship will no doubt expand on these ideas, looking at other geographies and periods, as well as other groups of travelers and migrants. * Jonathan Roche, Journal of British Studies * [The book] reflects the growing importance of early modern Catholics travelling in Europe for reasons beyond exile, and this book will be of value to anyone interested in the educational and confessional practices of this religious minority. * Eilish Gregory, Europe Now *


Corens gives a solid overview of underappreciated aspects of English Catholic networks which sustained English Catholicism during a period of disruption and dislocation ... Corens has presented an excellent case for a more fluid approach to early modern English Catholicism which recognizes the ongoing exchanges between Catholics in England and their counterparts on the European mainland. This book is a timely reminder that it was people rather than institutions who sustained English Catholicism in times of trouble. * Kirsteen M. MacKenzie, European History Quarterly * Confessional Mobility makes an important contribution to the debate around the exile period and suggests new ways of approaching the material. It is a bold venture that sheds light on the significance of those Catholics who spent time abroad in order to make a difference for those of their co-religionists who remained at home. Whether active themselves or supporting the activities of others through prayers and pilgrimages, benefactions and a raft of other actions as interpreted by Liesbeth Corens, this book helps us to shift English Catholics further away from victimhood to positive contributions to the survival of the Catholic faith. * Caroline Bowden, Queen Mary, University of London * Corens paints a compelling picture of a dynamic community of active agents. She realigns our view of early modern English Catholicism as an essentially mobile phenomenon, with all the characteristics that entailed. This important book is as much focussed on ideas as evidence, yet it is underpinned by archival research of the highest quality. By building a new conceptual landscape for expatriate English Catholicism, Liesbeth Corens makes a truly transformative contribution to the historiography of early modern English Catholicism and early modern religion, and this book is surely destined to become indispensable reading for scholars of confessional identities in early modern Europe. * Reviews in History * an important contribution ... It presents a convincing case for the vitality of English Catholicism in the late seventeenth century and for an expanded understanding of expatriate Catholics. It shines new light on the subject of early modern migration, and future scholarship will no doubt expand on these ideas, looking at other geographies and periods, as well as other groups of travelers and migrants. * Jonathan Roche, Journal of British Studies * [The book] reflects the growing importance of early modern Catholics travelling in Europe for reasons beyond exile, and this book will be of value to anyone interested in the educational and confessional practices of this religious minority. * Eilish Gregory, Europe Now * Corens has presented an excellent case for a more fluid approach to early modern English Catholicism which recognizes the ongoing exchanges between Catholics in England and their counterparts on the European mainland. This book is a timely reminder that it was people rather than institutions who sustained English Catholicism in times of trouble. * Kirsteen MacKenzie, European History Quarterly *


Author Information

Liesbeth Corens is a Lecturer in Early Modern History at Queen Mary, University of London, where she arrived after a PhD at the University of Cambridge and research fellowships at the universities of Cambridge and Oxford. Her works focuses on early modern Catholic minorities and their central role in the Counter-Reformation. Having finished researching for Confessional Mobility she is currently working on Creating Counter-Archives: Record-collecting and Commemoration among Catholic Minorities, ca. 1660-1730, a comparative study of the commemorative practices of both English and Dutch Catholics. With Alexandra Walsham and Kate Peters, she has edited a number of volumes on the history of archives: 'The Social History of the Archive: Record Keeping in Early Modern Europe', Past & Present Supplement, 11, (2016) and Archives and Information in the Early Modern World (OUP, 2018).

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