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Printing, power, and piety : appeals to the public during the early years of the English Reformation / by Brad C. Pardue.
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Title:Printing, power, and piety : appeals to the public during the early years of the English Reformation / by Brad C. Pardue.
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Author/Creator:Pardue, Brad C.
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Published/Created:Leiden ; Boston : Brill, 2012.
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Holdings
Holdings Record Display
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Location:KOERNER LIBRARY stacks (Floor 1)Where is this?
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Call Number: BR350.T8 P37 2012
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Number of Items:1
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Status:Available
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Links:Donor bookplate
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Location:KOERNER LIBRARY stacks (Floor 1)Where is this?
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Library of Congress Subjects:Tyndale, William, -1536.
Reformation--England.
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Description:viii, 237 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
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Series:Studies in medieval and Reformation traditions ; v. 162.
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Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
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ISBN:9789004232051 (hardback : alk. paper)
9004232052 (hardback : alk. paper)
9789004232068 (e-book)
9004232060 (e-book)
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Contents:Machine generated contents note: 1. William Tyndale and Early Modern Appeals to the Public during the English Reformation
I. New Appeals to the Public between 1525 and 15355
II. Publics, Publicness, and the Public Sphere
III. Role of Printing and Vernacularization
1. Printing
2. Vernacularization
IV. Legacy of Tyndale's Translations and Theology
V. Structure of the Following Study
2. "[T]he very brest of all this batayle... the questyon whyche is the chyrche": The Conflicting Ecclesiologies of William Tyndale and Thomas More
I. Spirituality and Temporality: Two Estates or Two Regiments?
II. More and Tyndale on the Church, Scripture, and Religious Authority
1. Thomas More's Understanding of the Church
2. William Tyndale's Understanding of the Church
3. "pure worde of god" or "vnwritten verities": Scripture and Tradition As Competing Sources of Authority
III. Conclusion: Tensions in More's and Tyndale's Positions and the Implications of Their Ecclesiologies
3. Implications of Media: How Vernacularization and Printing Shaped the Content and Reception of the Writings of William Tyndale and Thomas More
I. Battle of Ideas in the Theater of Material Production
II. Readers of Reformist Literature
III. Printing and Circulation
IV. Additional Implications of the Medium of Print
V. Conclusion
4. Thomas More and Henry VIII at Cross-Purposes
I. English Situation in Early 1532: More's Confutation Preface
II. Safe Conducts for English Reformers
1. Simon Fish and the Supplication of the Beggars
2. Stephen Vaughn's Mission to the Reformers in 1531
III. Conclusion: More's Position Becomes Untenable
5. William Tyndale, Henry VIII, and the Royal Supremacy
I. Henry VIII: "Defender of the Faith" and "Supreme Head of the Church of England"
II. Tyndale on the King and the Two Regiments
1. Kings in the Temporal Regiment
2. Kings in the Spiritual Regiment
III. Royal Supremacy and Henrician Propaganda in the 1530s
Conclusion: Tyndale's Enduring Legacy
I. Great Bible Woodcut of 1539
II. Cranmer's Great Bible Preface
III. Religious and Political Legacies of Tyndale's Thought.