recusantsandrenegades.wordpress.com
Mary Langworth and Richard Hawkins | Recusants and renegades
https://recusantsandrenegades.wordpress.com/2014/12/21/mary-langworth-and-richard-hawkins
Faith, family and resistance in early modern England. Susan Hawkins and John Finch of Grovehurst. 8216;A perfect member of his misticall bodie the auntient holly Catholique and appostollicall Church’: the last will and testament of Richard Hawkins →. Mary Langworth and Richard Hawkins. December 21, 2014. My exploration of a network of recusant families in Elizabethan and Jacobean Kent and Sussex began with the Langworth. Who married Nathaniel Spurrett and whose daughter Frances. Parish church of St Peter...
recusantsandrenegades.wordpress.com
Recusants and renegades | faith, family and resistance in early modern England | Page 2
https://recusantsandrenegades.wordpress.com/page/2
Faith, family and resistance in early modern England. Newer posts →. Francis Langworth (1597 – 1688). January 15, 2015. I’ve been exploring the lives of Mary Langworth and her husband Richard Hawkins, an early seventeenth-century Kent landowner and prominent Catholic recusant. Before that, I wrote extensively about other members of the illustrious Hawkins family, all of whom were staunch Catholics, and before that about Mary Langworth’s sister Helen. Parish church, Little Chart (via wikipedia). February ...
europeanconversionnarratives.wordpress.com
Narrative Conversions: a Workshop – Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe
https://europeanconversionnarratives.wordpress.com/2014/05/09/narrative-conversions-a-workshop
Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe. The blog for the AHRC-funded project, 'Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe'. May 9, 2014. Narrative Conversions: a Workshop. On 2nd and 3rd June, we will be hosting a workshop on the theme of Narrative Conversions, organised in collaboration with the Early Modern Conversions. For more details or to apply to participate, please contact Helen Smith (helen.smith@york.ac.uk). For our formal Call for Papers,. A Collaborative Workshop sponsored by. The wor...
colwichabbey.org.uk
Colwich Abbey
http://colwichabbey.org.uk/links.html
Who Were the Nuns? English nuns on the Continent before the French Revolution). Beth Nielsen Chapman (panis angelicus). The English Benedictine Congregation. The Archdiocese of Birmingham. St Joseph and St. Etheldreda. The Monastic Mission of the English Benedictine Congregation. 2014 , St. Marys Abbey, Colwich.
europeanconversionnarratives.wordpress.com
europeanconversionnarratives – Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe
https://europeanconversionnarratives.wordpress.com/author/europeanconversionnarratives
Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe. The blog for the AHRC-funded project, 'Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe'. May 9, 2014. Conversion Narratives – So What? May 9, 2014. Narrative Conversions: a Workshop. On 2nd and 3rd June, we will be hosting a workshop on the theme of Narrative Conversions, organised in collaboration with the Early Modern Conversions. Discussions will range across narrative lines (both figurative and literal), tales of musical conversion, and the transformations o...
europeanconversionnarratives.wordpress.com
‘Converted to a cat’ – Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe
https://europeanconversionnarratives.wordpress.com/2013/08/08/converted-to-a-cat
Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe. The blog for the AHRC-funded project, 'Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe'. August 8, 2013. 8216;Converted to a cat’. The most famous apocyrphal cat of the Renaissance? Petrarch’s mummified cat at Casa del Petrarca. In honour of World Cat Day, I did a quick search on the fabulous Early English Books Online to see if cats were ever described as agents of conversion, in the same way as were their enemies (or at least their sometime prey) fish. Shocked...
europeanconversionnarratives.wordpress.com
Conversion Narratives – So What? – Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe
https://europeanconversionnarratives.wordpress.com/2014/05/09/conversion-narratives-so-what
Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe. The blog for the AHRC-funded project, 'Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe'. May 9, 2014. Conversion Narratives – So What? For a taster). Rather, I would like to offer some short reflections on how a fuller understanding of this theme can enrich the wider field of religious and cultural history in (not only) the early modern period. To that end, I will take three concepts where our project has, I believe, made a substantive contribution. The greater ...
chwr.org
Ninth Triennial Conference (2013) Recap | Conference on the History of Women Religious
http://www.chwr.org/ninth-triennial-conference-recap
Conference on the History of Women Religious. 8220;Why I Study Women Religious”. Tenth Triennial Conference (2016). Ninth Triennial Conference (2013) Recap. Eighth Triennial Conference (2010) Recap. Seventh Triennial Conference (2007) Recap. Sixth Triennial Conference (2004) Recap. Fifth Triennial Conference (2001) Recap. Fourth Triennial Conference (1998) Recap. Third Triennial Conference (1995) Recap. Second Triennial Conference (1992) Recap. First Triennial Conference (1989) Recap. Anne M. Butler.
europeanconversionnarratives.wordpress.com
Tattoos II – Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe
https://europeanconversionnarratives.wordpress.com/2013/09/06/tattoos-ii
Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe. The blog for the AHRC-funded project, 'Conversion Narratives in Early Modern Europe'. September 6, 2013. Following on from a post on holiday tattoos in Jerusalem I’ve come across an interesting reference to tattoos and conversion in Nabil Matar’s article ‘ Turning Turk’: Conversion to Islam in English Renaissance Thought’, Durham University Journal. 1 (1994), pp. 33-50. This entry was posted in Islam. And tagged Abi Shinn. 8216;Converted to a cat’. Tweets fro...