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‘Strange enthusiastical exhortations’: Distress, Religious Identity, and the English Reformation

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Abstract

This article uses letters from BL Lansdowne 99 to explore how a diverse group of individuals experiencing mental and emotional distress utilised religious ideas as a primary means of interpreting their experience and expressing themselves to those in authority in Elizabethan England. It shifts emphasis away from the causes and towards the construction and experience of distress. It argues that such letters shed important light on the character and progress of the English Reformation by the closing decades of the sixteenth century, as well as on the operation of the process of Reformation itself.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-30
Number of pages30
JournalJournal of Ecclesiastical History
Early online date4 Apr 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 4 Apr 2025

Keywords

  • Reformation
  • History of emotions
  • Religion
  • early modern England
  • history

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • History

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