
Contents
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Probate Inventories Probate Inventories
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Institutional Libraries Institutional Libraries
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Booksellers Booksellers
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Appendix Appendix
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Oxford Bookseller Oxford Bookseller
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Cambridge Bookseller Cambridge Bookseller
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Oxford Scholar Oxford Scholar
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Continental protestant texts Continental protestant texts
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English protestant texts English protestant texts
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Catholic texts Catholic texts
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Fathers Fathers
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Bibles Bibles
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Scholastic texts Scholastic texts
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Classical texts Classical texts
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Grammars and lexicons Grammars and lexicons
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Cambridge Scholar Cambridge Scholar
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Continental protestant texts Continental protestant texts
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Catholic texts Catholic texts
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Fathers Fathers
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Bibles Bibles
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Classical texts Classical texts
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Scholastic texts Scholastic texts
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Scottish Readers Scottish Readers
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2 Unreliable Witnesses
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Published:December 2010
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Abstract
Innovation in print and the dissemination of reformation texts were as central to Protestant reform as biblical translation and the circulation of erudite Protestant scholarship in manuscript. The history of the book is an obvious starting point for understanding reformation reception and overlaps with reception studies by its concern with readership and the historical context of printed matter. This chapter explores the historical contingency of the sources available for quantifying the ownership of continental reformed texts, with particular emphasis on the universities in Britain. Probate inventories, anecdotal evidence, booksellers’ lists, and surviving books present different and often conflicting stories. The discrepancy between Cambridge and Oxford inventories, for instance, may have had more to do with the university appraisers than religious conservatism in Oxford.
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