Table of Contents
Introduction: post-revisionism and the history of practices in the early modern British world – William J. Bulman
Part I: Political and religious practices
1 Stealing bibles in early modern London – Ethan H. Shagan
2 Printed English-language bible concordances to c. 1640 and intentions for lay bible use – Amy G. Tan
3 In the company of merchants: Edward Sherburne, the East India Company, and the transformation of Stuart political practices – Rupali Mishra
4 Consensual conflict in the early Stuart House of Commons – William J. Bulman
5 John Hacket’s Scrinia Reserata and the oral history of early Stuart England – Noah Millstone
6 ‘Man of moderation’: the Restoration bishop of Norwich – Isaac Stephens
7 Hoadly the high and Sacheverell the low: religious and political celebrity in post-revolutionary England – Brian Cowan
Part II: British, European, and Atlantic dimensions
8 The Nine Years’ War in Ireland (1594–1603) as problem of government – Brendan Kane
9 Luisa de Carvajal, her ‘Life’, and the place of women in counter-reformation politics –
Freddy C. Domínguez
10 Of gods and beasts: the many bodies of James VI and I – Alastair Bellany
11 Empire of heresy: Samuel Gorton, Gerrard Winstanley, and the London roots of trans-Atlantic revolutionary religion – David R. Como
Index