European Reformation Research Group
Papers Delivered at the Fourteenth Annual Conference
University College Northampton, 2 - 4 September 2004
Sylvia Gill (University of Birmingham): 'Analysing the Chantry Clergy Population of the Midlands'
Peter Webster (University of Sheffield): 'The transfer of ideas from the Continental to the English Reformations: the cases for and against music in church 1550-1640'
Nick Thompson (University of Aberdeen): 'Going Public: the private mass in the writing of Catholic irenicists'
Trevor Johnson (University of the West of England): 'Counter Reformation angels'
Daniel Van Voorhis (University of St. Andrews): 'Establishing the Borders of Lutheran Orthodoxy: Johann Arndt in the Confessional Age'
Adam S. Francisco (Keble College, Oxford): 'Luther's use of the Dreiständelehre in his polemic against the Turks and Islam'
Ralph S. Werell: 'William Tyndale was not a Lutheran'
Sara Barker (University of St. Andrews): 'Words as weapons: Ronsard and his Protestant critics, 1560-65'
Lauren Kim (University of St. Andrews): 'The publication of French royal acts during the sixteenth century'
Sophie Murray (Merton College, Oxford): 'Answering a fool according to his folly: William Gray's ballads, 1540-41'
James Lee (University of the West of England): 'The Bristol "pulpit debates": civil sectarianism in an English provincial town'
Brian Lugioyo (University of Aberdeen): 'Martin Bucer and the Regensburg article on justification (1541)'
Polly Ha (Clare College, Cambridge): 'Why Walter Travers read Heinrich Bullinger'
Korey D. Maas (St. Cross College, Oxford): 'Rethinking the Reformation Significance of Robert Barnes (1495-1540)'
Louise Campbell (University of Birmingham): '"For Order's Sake": Edification and Indifference in Elizabethan England'
Alec Ryrie (University of Birmingham): 'Playing
with Fire: Heresy and Politics in James V's Scotland'