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Metos, Merik the Vanishing Pope.Pdf
WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY THE VANISHING POPE MERIK HUNTER METOS SPRING 2009 ADVISOR: DR. SPOHNHOLZ DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS Honors Thesis ************************* PASS WITH DISTINCTION JOSI~~ s eLf" \\)J I \%\1 )10 dW JOJ JOS!Ape S!SalH· S\;/ :383110J S~ONOH A.1IS~31\INn 3H.1 0.1 PRECIS Pope Benoit XIII (1328-1423), although an influential advocate for reforms within the Catholic Church in the middle ages, receives little attention from modem historians. Historians rarely offer more than a brief biography and often neglect to mention at all his key role in the Great Schism. Yet, the very absence ofPope Benoit XIU from most historical narratives of medieval history itself highlights the active role that historians play in determining what gets recorded. In some cases, the choices that people make in determining what does, and what does not, get included in historical accounts reveals as much about the motivations and intentions of the people recording that past as it does about their subjects. This essay studies one example of this problem, in this case Europeans during the Reformation era who self-consciously manipulated sources from medieval history to promote their own agendas. We can see this in the sixteenth-century translation ofa treatise written by the medieval theologian Nicholas de Clamanges (1363-1437. Clamanges was a university professor and served as Benoit XIII's secretary during the Great Schism in Avignon, France. The treatise, entitled La Traite de fa Ruine de f'Eglise, was written in Latin in 1398 and was first distributed after Clamanges' death in 1437. -
Introduction
Introduction The Other Voice [Monsieur de Voysenon] told [the soldiers] that in the past he had known me to be a good Catholic, but that he could not say whether or not I had remained that way. At that mo- ment arrived an honorable woman who asked them what they wanted to do with me; they told her, “By God, she is a Huguenot who ought to be drowned.” Charlotte Arbaleste Duplessis-Mornay, Memoirs The judge was talking about the people who had been ar- rested and the sorts of disguises they had used. All of this terrified me. But my fear was far greater when both the priest and the judge turned to me and said, “Here is a little rascal who could easily be a Huguenot.” I was very upset to see myself addressed that way. However, I responded with as much firmness as I could, “I can assure you, sir, that I am as much a Catholic as I am a boy.” Anne Marguerite Petit Du Noyer, Memoirs The cover of this book depicting Protestantism as a woman attacked on all sides reproduces the engraving that appears on the frontispiece of the first volume of Élie Benoist’s History of the Edict of Nantes.1 This illustration serves well Benoist’s purpose in writing his massive work, which was to protest both the injustice of revoking an “irrevocable” edict and the oppressive measures accompanying it. It also says much about the Huguenot experience in general, and the experience of Huguenot women in particular. When Benoist undertook the writing of his work, the association between Protestantism and women was not new. -
The Historical Development of Irish Euroscepticism to 2001
The Historical Development of Irish Euroscepticism to 2001 Troy James Piechnick Thesis submitted as part of the Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) program at Flinders University on the 1st of September 2016 Social and Behavioural Sciences School of History and International Relations Flinders University 2016 Supervisors Professor Peter Monteath (PhD) Dr Evan Smith (PhD) Associate Professor Matt Fitzpatrick (PhD) Contents GLOSSARY III ABSTRACT IV ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS V CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1 DEFINITIONS 2 PARAMETERS 13 LITERATURE REVIEW 14 MORE RECENT DEVELOPMENTS 20 THESIS AND METHODOLOGY 24 STRUCTURE 28 CHAPTER 2 EARLY ANTECEDENTS OF IRISH EUROSCEPTICISM: 1886–1949 30 IRISH REPUBLICANISM, 1780–1886 34 FIRST HOME RULE BILL (1886) AND SECOND HOME RULE BILL (1893) 36 THE BOER WAR, 1899–1902 39 SINN FÉIN 40 WORLD WAR I AND EASTER RISING 42 IRISH DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE 46 IRISH WAR OF INDEPENDENCE 1919 AND CIVIL WAR 1921 47 BALFOUR DECLARATION OF 1926 AND THE STATUTE OF WESTMINSTER IN 1931 52 EAMON DE VALERA AND WORLD WAR II 54 REPUBLIC OF IRELAND ACT 1948 AND OTHER IMPLICATIONS 61 CONCLUSION 62 CHAPTER 3 THE TREATY OF ROME AND FAILED APPLICATIONS FOR MEMBERSHIP IN 1961 AND 1967 64 THE TREATY OF ROME 67 IRELAND IN THE 1950S 67 DEVELOPING IRISH EUROSCEPTICISM IN THE 1950S 68 FAILED APPLICATIONS FOR MEMBERSHIP IN 1961 AND 1967 71 IDEOLOGICAL MAKINGS: FURTHER DEVELOPMENTS OF A EUROSCEPTIC NATURE (1960S) 75 Communist forms of Irish euroscepticism 75 Irish eurosceptics and republicanism 78 Irish euroscepticism accommodating democratic socialism 85 -
The Idea of Medieval Heresy in Early Modern France
The Idea of Medieval Heresy in Early Modern France Bethany Hume PhD University of York History September 2019 2 Abstract This thesis responds to the historiographical focus on the trope of the Albigensians and Waldensians within sixteenth-century confessional polemic. It supports a shift away from the consideration of medieval heresy in early modern historical writing merely as literary topoi of the French Wars of Religion. Instead, it argues for a more detailed examination of the medieval heretical and inquisitorial sources used within seventeenth-century French intellectual culture and religious polemic. It does this by examining the context of the Doat Commission (1663-1670), which transcribed a collection of inquisition registers from Languedoc, 1235-44. Jean de Doat (c.1600-1683), President of the Chambre des Comptes of the parlement of Pau from 1646, was charged by royal commission to the south of France to copy documents of interest to the Crown. This thesis aims to explore the Doat Commission within the wider context of ideas on medieval heresy in seventeenth-century France. The periodization “medieval” is extremely broad and incorporates many forms of heresy throughout Europe. As such, the scope of this thesis surveys how thirteenth-century heretics, namely the Albigensians and Waldensians, were portrayed in historical narrative in the 1600s. The field of study that this thesis hopes to contribute to includes the growth of historical interest in medieval heresy and its repression, and the search for original sources by seventeenth-century savants. By exploring the ideas of medieval heresy espoused by different intellectual networks it becomes clear that early modern European thought on medieval heresy informed antiquarianism, historical writing, and ideas of justice and persecution, as well as shaping confessional identity. -
Download- Ed From: Books at JSTOR, EBSCO, Hathi Trust, Internet Archive, OAPEN, Project MUSE, and Many Other Open Repositories
’ James B. Collins, Professor of History, Georgetown University Mack P. Holt, Professor of History, George Mason University The Scourge of Demons: Pragmatic Toleration: Possession, Lust, and Witchcra in a The Politics of Religious Heterodoxy in Seventeenth-Century Italian Convent Early Reformation Antwerp, – Jerey R. Watt Victoria Christman Expansion and Crisis in Louis XIV’s Violence and Honor in France: Franche-Comté and Prerevolutionary Périgord Absolute Monarchy, – Steven G. Reinhardt Darryl Dee State Formation in Early Modern Noble Strategies in an Early Modern Alsace, – Small State: The Mahuet of Lorraine Stephen A. Lazer Charles T. Lipp Consuls and Captives: Louis XIV’s Assault on Privilege: Dutch-North African Diplomacy in the Nicolas Desmaretz and the Early Modern Mediterranean Tax on Wealth Erica Heinsen-Roach Gary B. McCollim Gunpowder, Masculinity, and Warfare A Show of Hands for the Republic: in German Texts, – Opinion, Information, and Repression Patrick Brugh in Eighteenth-Century Rural France Jill Maciak Walshaw A complete list of titles in the Changing Perspectives on Early Modern Europe series may be found on our website, www.urpress.com. The Consistory and Social Discipline in Calvin’s Geneva Jerey R. Watt Copyright © by Jerey R. Watt CC BY-NC All rights reserved. Except as permitted under current legislation, no part of this work may be photocopied, stored in a retrieval system, published, performed in public, adapted, broadcast, transmitted, recorded, or reproduced in any form or by any means, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. First published University of Rochester Press Mt. Hope Avenue, Rochester, NY , USA www.urpress.com and Boydell & Brewer Limited PO Box , Woodbridge, Suolk IP DF, UK www.boydellandbrewer.com ISBN-: ---- ISSN: -; vol. -
Letters from the Queen of Navarre with an Ample Declaration
JEANNE D’ALBRET Letters from the Queen of Navarre with an Ample Declaration • Edited and translated by KATHLEEN M. LLEWELLYN, EMILY E. THOMPSON, AND COLETTE H. WINN Iter Academic Press Toronto, Ontario Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies Tempe, Arizona 2016 Iter Academic Press Tel: 416/978–7074 Email: [email protected] Fax: 416/978–1668 Web: www.itergateway.org Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies Tel: 480/965–5900 Email: [email protected] Fax: 480/965–1681 Web: acmrs.org © 2016 Iter, Inc. and the Arizona Board of Regents for Arizona State University. All rights reserved. Printed in Canada. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Jeanne d’Albret, Queen of Navarre, 1528–1572, author. | Llewellyn, Kathleen M., editor and translator. | Thompson, Emily E., editor and translator. | Winn, Colette H., editor and translator. | Jeanne d’Albret, Queen of Navarre, 1528–1572. Ample déclaration. Title: Jeanne d’Albret : letters from the Queen of Navarre with an ample declaration / edited and translated by Kathleen M. Llewellyn, Emily E. Thompson, and Collette H. Winn. Other titles: Correspondence. English. | Ample déclaration. Description: Tempe, Arizona : Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies ; Toronto, Ontario : Iter Academic Press, [2016] | Series: The other voice in early modern Europe ; 43 | Series: Medieval and renaissance texts and studies ; volume 490 | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2015042129 (print) | LCCN 2015047111 (ebook) | ISBN 9780866985451 (pbk. : alk. paper) | ISBN 9780866987172 () Subjects: LCSH: Jeanne d’Albret, Queen of Navarre, 1528–1572.--Correspondence | Queens--France-- Correspondence. | France--Kings and rulers--Correspondence. | France--History--Charles IX, 1560-1574--Sources. -
Portraits of the Queen Mother: Polemics, Panegyrics, Letters
Portraits of the Queen Mother: Polemics, Panegyrics, Letters CATHERINE DE MÉDICIS AND OTHERS • Translation and study by LEAH L. CHANG AND KATHERINE KONG Iter Inc. Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies Toronto 2014 Iter: Gateway to the Middle Ages and Renaissance Tel: 416/978–7074 Email: [email protected] Fax: 416/978–1668 Web: www.itergateway.org Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies Victoria University in the University of Toronto Tel: 416/585–4465 Email: [email protected] Fax: 416/585–4430 Web: www.crrs.ca © 2014 Iter Inc. & Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies All rights reserved. Printed in Canada. Iter and the Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies gratefully acknowledge the generous support of James E. Rabil, in memory of Scottie W. Rabil, toward the publication of this book. Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Portraits of the queen mother : polemics, panegyrics, letters / Catherine de Médicis and others ; translation and study by Leah L. Chang and Katherine Kong. (The other voice in early modern Europe. The Toronto series ; 35) Translated from the French. Includes bibliographical references and index. Issued in print and electronic formats. ISBN 978-0-7727-2172-3 (pbk).—ISBN 978-0-7727-2173-0 (pdf) 1. Catherine de Médicis, Queen, consort of Henry II, King of France, 1519–1589—Correspondence. 2. Queens—France—Biography. 3. Mothers—France—Biography. 4. France—Politics and govern- ment—16th century—Sources. I. Chang, Leah L., translator II. Kong, Katherine, translator III. Victoria University (Toronto, Ont.). Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies, issuing body IV. Iter Inc., issuing body V. -
French Protestantism, 1559-1562
FRENCH PROTESTANTISM, 1559-1562 FRENCH PROTESTANTISM, 15^^9-1562 BY CALEB GUYER KELLY A DISSERTATION Submitted to the Board of University Studies of The Johns Hopkins University in Conformity with the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy 1916 Baltimore 1918 Copyright 1918 by THE JOHNS HOPKINS PRESS PRESS OF THE NEW ERA PRINTING COMPANY LANCASTER. PA. CONTENTS Pagb Preface , vii Chapter I. Social and Economic Forces 9 Chapter II. The Resources of the Huguenots ... 38 Chapter III. The Organization of the Calvinists.. 69 Chapter IV. The Reform at Its Height 88 Chapter V. Friends and Foes at Home and Abroad 118 Chapter VI. Guise or Valois ? 137 Chapter VII. The Arsenal of Protestantism 163 Bibliographical References 179 Index 183 PREFACE The brief period between 1559 and 1562, interlacing the reigns of Henry II and of two of his sons, Francis II and Charles IX, was momentous in the history of French " Protestantism. Consequently studies in diplomacy and la " haute politique of that epoch of four years have been vigorously pursued, but the social and economic questions have been inadequately treated. Indeed, much of the real nature of the reign of Henry II and of the growth of the Reform during his incumbency is obscure. Nothing like " " (lie Catalogue des Actes du roi Frangois Ier as yet exists for the reign of Henry II. Therefore it has seemed to the writer eminently desirable to begin an investigation of the development of Protestantism through the operation of social and economic forces, particularly among the indus trial and working classes. The economic activity of the Huguenots reveals one of the aspects of their social life, and their commerce forms one of the great chapters in world history. -
Chapter 9: the Late Middle Ages Section 1: the Black Death
AP European History Chapter 7: 1550-1579 Section 4: 1560-1569 Political History By Dallin F. Hardy Florence Uffizi 1560 Begun Tuscany Cosimo I de’ Medici 1569-1574 Grand Duke of Tuscany Cosimo the Great Grand Duchy of Tuscany 1569-1859 Formerly known as Florence Reformation Religions in Europe 1560 Holy Roman Empire Heidelberg 1560’s Center for Calvinism Maximilian II 1564-1576 Holy Roman Emperor Hesse Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel 1567-1803 Scotland Scottish Reformation 1560 Led by John Knox Church of Scotland 1560 Presbyterian Founded by John Knox Return of Mary, Queen of Scots 1561 Daughter of James V of Scotland Mary of Guise Marriage of Henry & Mary 1565 Henry Stuart 1565-1567 King consort of Scotland Lord Darnley Birth of James 1566 James Hepburn Earl of Bothwell Mary’s lover Murder of David Rizzio 1566 Murder of Henry Stuart 1567 Kirk o’ Field Trial for Darnley’s Murder 1567 Marriage of Mary and James May 15, 1567 Scottish Rebellion 1567 Mary’s Imprisonment June 16, 1567 Loch Leven Castle Abdication of Mary, Queen of Scots July 24, 1567 James VI 1567-1625 King of Scotland Mary’s Escape May 2, 1568 Mary’s Exile in England 1568-1587 England Acts and Monuments 1563 John Foxe Foxe's Book of Martyrs Thirty-nine Articles 1563 Moderate Protestantism Official religion of the Church of England Puritans Former Marian exiles Wanted to purify Anglican Church Mary’s House Arrest in England 1568-1587 Mary Queen of Scots Rising of the North 1569 Catholic nobles -
William M. Meier Assistant Professor of History Texas Christian University TCU Box 297260 Fort Worth, TX 76129 [email protected] (817) 257-6302
William M. Meier Assistant Professor of History Texas Christian University TCU Box 297260 Fort Worth, TX 76129 [email protected] (817) 257-6302 Current Position: Assistant Professor of History, Texas Christian University, Fall 2011-present. Previous Employment: Visiting Assistant Professor of History, Miami University, 2009-2011. Lecturer, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2009. Adjunct Faculty, Concordia University Wisconsin-Madison, 2007-2009. George Mosse Teaching Fellow, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2007. Education: University of Wisconsin-Madison, Ph.D. in history, 2009. University of Wisconsin-Madison, M.A. in history, 2004. Miami University, B.A. in history, summa cum laude, 2002. Books: Property Crime in London, 1850-Present (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011). See: http://us.macmillan.com/propertycrimeinlondon1850present Terrorism and the British People [manuscript in progress] Articles: [with Ian Campbell Ross] “Irish Crime since 1921,” Eire-Ireland: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Irish Studies, 49: 1&2 (Spring/Summer 2014): 7-21. “Going on the Hoist: Women, Work, and Shoplifting in London, c. 1890-1940.” Journal of British Studies 50, No. 2 (April 2011): 410-433. See: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/658279 Edited Journal: Guest co-editor with Ian Campbell Ross, Eire-Ireland: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Irish Studies, 49: 1&2 (Spring/Summer 2014) Special Issue on Irish Crime since 1921. See: http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/eire-ireland/toc/eir.49.1-2.html Book reviews: Review of Ian Hesketh, The Science of History in -
Volume XIV, Issue 1 February 2020 PERSPECTIVES on TERRORISM Volume 14, Issue 1
ISSN 2334-3745 Volume XIV, Issue 1 February 2020 PERSPECTIVES ON TERRORISM Volume 14, Issue 1 Table of Contents Welcome from the Editors...............................................................................................................................1 Articles Detecting Future ‘Marawis’: Considering Alternative Indicators for Assessing the Potential for New Manifestations of Violent Extremism in Mindanao.......................................................................................3 by Joseph Franco The Threat of Transnational Terrorist Groups in Kashmir...........................................................................13 by Abhinav Pandya Research Notes Learning in a Double Loop: The Strategic Transformation of Al-Qaeda....................................................26 by Michael Fürstenberg and Carolin Görzig Brain and Body “Fingerprints” of Existential Anxiety and their Relevance for the Identification of Potential Terrorists........................................................................................................................................39 by Linda Wendelberg A New Inventory of 30 Terrorism Databases and Data Sets........................................................................54 by Neil G. Bowie Online Deceptions: Renegotiating Gender Boundaries on ISIS Telegram..................................................67 by Meili Criezis Resources Handbook of Terrorism and Counter Terrorism Post 9/11, edited by David M. Jones, Paul Schulte, Carl Ungerer, and M.R. Smith. Cheltenham, -
The Disappearance of Irishness in Conrad's the Secret Agent
West Chester University Digital Commons @ West Chester University English Faculty Publications English 1-1-2007 Under English Eyes: The Disappearance of Irishness in Conrad's The ecrS et Agent Graham MacPhee West Chester University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.wcupa.edu/eng_facpub Part of the Literature in English, British Isles Commons Recommended Citation MacPhee, G. (2007). Under English Eyes: The Disappearance of Irishness in Conrad's The eS cret Agent. Empire and After: Englishness in Postcolonial Perspective, 101-117. Retrieved from http://digitalcommons.wcupa.edu/eng_facpub/14 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the English at Digital Commons @ West Chester University. It has been accepted for inclusion in English Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ West Chester University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. MacPhee_ch 5.qxd 5/23/07 4:29 PM Page 101 CHAPTER 5 Under English Eyes The Disappearance of Irishness in Conrad’s The Secret Agent Graham MacPhee [ Nations it may be have fashioned their Governments, but the Governments have paid them back in the same coin. It is unthinkable that any young Englishman should find himself in Razumov’s situation. This being so it would be a vain enterprise to imagine what he would think. The only safe surmise to make is that …[h]e would not have an hereditary and personal knowledge of the means by which historical autocracy represses ideas, guards