HIST 251: Early Modern England
Lecture 07 - Late Medieval Religion and Its Critics. In this lecture Professor Wrightson surveys the religious landscape of England during the later medieval period through to the reign of Henry VIII and the beginnings of the reformation. He notes that while the late medieval church was more vibrant and popular than many early triumphal analysis of the reformation allowed for, there were, nonetheless, critics of Catholicism within England. He traces the earlier opposition to the church as arising from three primary groups: those educated clerics and laymen who desired reform within the church, the small pockets of Lollards within England who opposed traditional religion, and the group of people influenced by European reformation thought who would later work to implement doctrinal change within the Church of England. Professor Wrightson also provides an analysis of late medieval piety and the role that the traditional church played in people's daily lives at the local level prior to the reformation. (from oyc.yale.edu)
Lecture 07 - Late Medieval Religion and Its Critics |
Time | Lecture Chapters |
[00:00:00] | 1. Religion |
[00:05:08] | 2. The Pre-Reformation Church |
[00:14:51] | 3. Potential Weaknesses |
[00:29:31] | 4. Criticism |
References |
Lecture 7 - Late Medieval Religion and Its Critics Instructor: Professor Keith E. Wrightson. Transcript [html]. Audio [mp3]. Download Video [mov]. |
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