Description

Book Synopsis
A full scholarly edition of Dowsing's record of his and his deputies' activities in Suffolk, Cambridgeshire and Norfolk, 1643-4.During the Civil War, in late 1643 and 1644, the Suffolk puritan William Dowsing visited some hundred parish churches in Cambridgeshire, and about a hundred and fifty in Suffolk, smashing stained glass and other 'superstitious' imagery, ripping up monumental brass inscriptions, destroying altar rails and steps, and pulling down crucifixes and crosses. He dealt equally vigorously with the chapels of the Cambridge colleges, still fresh from their Laudian re-ordering. This modern edition of Dowsing's journal brings together, with commentary, the Cambridgeshire and Suffolk sections of his record of what he destroyed, never previously published together. Dowsing and his character and beliefs are set in context, with coverage of Dowsing and the administration of iconoclasm; the work of Dowsing and his deputies in Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and Suffolk; Dowsing and Cambridge University, and the arguments at PembrokeCollege; evidence of destruction in the other counties of the Eastern Association; the text and history of the journal. Contributors: JOHN BLATCHLY, TREVOR COOPER, JOHN MORRILL, S. SADLER, ROBERT WALKER.

Trade Review
A gem, the best kind of local history: lively, informative, and keenly aware of the broader contexts. ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW Important, informative and horribly enjoyable... adds to our understanding of 17th-century theological disputes, the civil war, the class system, ecclesiology, local history and the psychology of the iconoclast. ANTIQUARIES JOURNAL Will ensure that the history of East Anglia in the 1630s asnd 1640s will be accurately re-written... an important book. CHURCH TIMES [Nicholas Cranfield] A finely researched and well-documented picture of a key two-year campaign. SPAB NEWS This wholly admirable book, factual reconstruction at its best. The contributors have applied a magnifying glass to one of the most disturbing passages in English history, which Catholics can only read about with pain and revulsion. CATHOLIC HERALD [Anthony Symondon SJ] A magnificent work of scholarship, beautifully produced, and emphatically not expensive at £50. CROMWELLIANA A formidable piece of historical scholarship... a pioneering study of both 'a solid fanatic' and the role of iconoclasm in the godly reformation of the early 1640s. * JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF ARCHIVISTS *

Table of Contents
William Dowsing and the administration of iconoclasm, John Morrill; Dowsing's homes, John Blatchly; Dowsing in Cambridgeshire, Robert Walker; the visit to Cambridge University, Trevor Cooper; the arguments at Pembroke, S. Sadler; Dowsing's deputies in Suffolk, John Blatchly; brass, glass and crosses - finding iconoclasm outside the journal, Trevor Cooper; in search of bells - iconoclasm in Norfolk, 1644, John Blatchly; iconoclasm in other counties of the Eastern Association, Trevor Cooper; history of the journal, Trevor Cooper; the text of this edition of the journal, Trevor Cooper. Appendices.

The Journal of William Dowsing

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    A Hardback by Trevor Cooper

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      View other formats and editions of The Journal of William Dowsing by Trevor Cooper

      Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
      Publication Date: 05/03/2001
      ISBN13: 9780851158334, 978-0851158334
      ISBN10: 0851158331

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A full scholarly edition of Dowsing's record of his and his deputies' activities in Suffolk, Cambridgeshire and Norfolk, 1643-4.During the Civil War, in late 1643 and 1644, the Suffolk puritan William Dowsing visited some hundred parish churches in Cambridgeshire, and about a hundred and fifty in Suffolk, smashing stained glass and other 'superstitious' imagery, ripping up monumental brass inscriptions, destroying altar rails and steps, and pulling down crucifixes and crosses. He dealt equally vigorously with the chapels of the Cambridge colleges, still fresh from their Laudian re-ordering. This modern edition of Dowsing's journal brings together, with commentary, the Cambridgeshire and Suffolk sections of his record of what he destroyed, never previously published together. Dowsing and his character and beliefs are set in context, with coverage of Dowsing and the administration of iconoclasm; the work of Dowsing and his deputies in Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and Suffolk; Dowsing and Cambridge University, and the arguments at PembrokeCollege; evidence of destruction in the other counties of the Eastern Association; the text and history of the journal. Contributors: JOHN BLATCHLY, TREVOR COOPER, JOHN MORRILL, S. SADLER, ROBERT WALKER.

      Trade Review
      A gem, the best kind of local history: lively, informative, and keenly aware of the broader contexts. ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW Important, informative and horribly enjoyable... adds to our understanding of 17th-century theological disputes, the civil war, the class system, ecclesiology, local history and the psychology of the iconoclast. ANTIQUARIES JOURNAL Will ensure that the history of East Anglia in the 1630s asnd 1640s will be accurately re-written... an important book. CHURCH TIMES [Nicholas Cranfield] A finely researched and well-documented picture of a key two-year campaign. SPAB NEWS This wholly admirable book, factual reconstruction at its best. The contributors have applied a magnifying glass to one of the most disturbing passages in English history, which Catholics can only read about with pain and revulsion. CATHOLIC HERALD [Anthony Symondon SJ] A magnificent work of scholarship, beautifully produced, and emphatically not expensive at £50. CROMWELLIANA A formidable piece of historical scholarship... a pioneering study of both 'a solid fanatic' and the role of iconoclasm in the godly reformation of the early 1640s. * JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF ARCHIVISTS *

      Table of Contents
      William Dowsing and the administration of iconoclasm, John Morrill; Dowsing's homes, John Blatchly; Dowsing in Cambridgeshire, Robert Walker; the visit to Cambridge University, Trevor Cooper; the arguments at Pembroke, S. Sadler; Dowsing's deputies in Suffolk, John Blatchly; brass, glass and crosses - finding iconoclasm outside the journal, Trevor Cooper; in search of bells - iconoclasm in Norfolk, 1644, John Blatchly; iconoclasm in other counties of the Eastern Association, Trevor Cooper; history of the journal, Trevor Cooper; the text of this edition of the journal, Trevor Cooper. Appendices.

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