
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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The Hampton Court Conference The Hampton Court Conference
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The Articles of Perth The Articles of Perth
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The Luther Centenary The Luther Centenary
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Jacobean Historiography Jacobean Historiography
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3 That Damned Dialogue: The Reformations of Jacobean Britain, 1603–25
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Published:July 2022
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Abstract
This third chapter analyses the increasingly fractious relations between the national churches of England and Scotland. The first section examines how James VI of Scotland, newly crowned in 1603 as James I of England, embraced the Church of England. The second section details the king’s attempt, from 1617 onward, at using his new church to set the standard for how the churches in his other kingdoms would operate. But placing the Church of England into close contact with the Church of Scotland revealed conflicting understandings of sixteenth-century religious change. The English church was just as far removed from the developing historiographies of evangelicals in Europe. As the third section shows, the English took no notice in 1617 of the first Luther centenary. The chapter concludes with a survey of Jacobean historiography on Tudor England. Setting the stage for Chapter 4, this portion of the chapter notes that early Stuart historians not only failed to see Tudor religious history as one of reformation—they actually advanced the first negative appraisals of the sacrilege that took place under Henry VIII and Edward VI.
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