European Reformation
Research Group
Papers Delivered at the Fourth Annual Conference
University of St.
Andrews, 4 - 7 August 1994
- Bruce Gordon (University of St. Andrews): 'Sixteenth-century views of Savonarola'
ür Europäische Geschichte,
Mainz): '"Scandal" in sixteenth-century Protestant
thought'
- Paul Regan (University of Southampton): 'The Dutch Israel thesis'
- Howard Hotson (University of Aberdeen): 'The origins of Calvinist millenarianism as a
crisis of Protestant identity'
- David Newcombe (University of Bangor): 'John Hooper's visitation of Gloucester'
- Per Ingesman (Clare Hall, Cambridge): 'The patronage of the former clients: the
Archbishops as patrons in later medieval Denmark'
- David Watson (University of St. Andrews): 'Jean Crespin and the writing of history in
the French Reformation'
- Andrew Pettegree (University of St. Andrews): 'Adriaen van Haemstede: the heretic as
historian'
- Trevor Johnson (University of the West of England): 'The Upper Palatinate nobility and
the Counter-Reformation'
- Stephen Alford (University of St. Andrews): '"Thamitie betwixt us and that
realme": rhetoric, unity and the British Protestant elite'
- Alec Ryrie (University of St. Andrews): 'Shifting concepts of legitimacy and precedent
in England, 1539-47'
- Christopher Bradshaw (University of St. Andrews): 'Reforming according to the law: Old
Testament prototypes for the Edwardian Reformation'
ür Europäische Geschichte,
Mainz): 'Burden or benevolence: poor relief and parish finance in Emden during the age of
the Reformation'
- Andrew Spicer (Stonyhurst College): 'The finances of the English French-speaking
churches and their systems of poor relief'
- Peter Marshall (University of Warwick): 'The debate over "unwritten verities"
in Reformation England'
- Helen Parish (Jesus College, Oxford): 'Clerical celibacy and theological corruption in
English Reformation polemic'
- Julian Lock (University of Oxford): 'Battles for past centuries: Protestant England and
the ownership of the Middle Ages'
- William Naphy (University of Manchester): 'Writing the history of the Genevan
Reformation: contemporary chronicles in the Genevan city archives'
- Karin Maag (University of St. Andrews): 'Financing education: patronage and its
obligation in Zurich, 1550-1620'
- Richard Cahill (Institut f
ür Europäische
Geschichte, Mainz): 'The dissolution of the monasteries and economic anticlericalism in
the Hessian Reformation'
- Markus Wriedt (Institut f
ür Europäische Geschichte, Mainz): 'The reform of education in
Wittenberg under Luther'
- Geoffrey Dipple (Queen's, Ontario): 'Anabaptism and
medieval heresy'
- Nicole Mische-Gothelf (University of Notre Dame, Indiana):
'Protestant identity in early New England'
- Ute Lotz-Heumann (Giessen): 'The Protestant interpretation
of history in Ireland: the case of James Usher'
- Bodo Nischan (East Carolina University): 'Popular piety in
the age of confessionalism: the case of Brandenburg'
- Penny Roberts (University of Warwick): 'Fostering the
faithful: sources of support and protection for French Reformed Churches'
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