"A Pitiful Thing"?: The Afterlife of the Dissolution of the English Monasteries in Early Modern Chronicles, ca. 1540-ca. 1640

Modern scholarship on the dissolution of the monasteries (1536-40) has paid little attention to how it was remembered by those who witnessed it or to the evolution of this memory in subsequent generations. This article explores the afterlife of the dissolution in early modern chronicles. It focuses...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The sixteenth century journal
Main Author: Lyon, Harriet (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Sixteenth Century Journal Publishers, Inc. [2018]
In: The sixteenth century journal
IxTheo Classification:KAG Church history 1500-1648; Reformation; humanism; Renaissance
KBF British Isles
KCA Monasticism; religious orders
KDB Roman Catholic Church
KDE Anglican Church
SA Church law; state-church law
Further subjects:B ANNALES (Book)
B STOW, John, ca. 1525-1605
B BRITISH history sources
B WRIOTHESLEY, Charles
B 1485-
B England
B HOWE, Edmund
B Monasteries
B Church History
B Collective Memory
Description
Summary:Modern scholarship on the dissolution of the monasteries (1536-40) has paid little attention to how it was remembered by those who witnessed it or to the evolution of this memory in subsequent generations. This article explores the afterlife of the dissolution in early modern chronicles. It focuses on three interrelated texts: Charles Wriothesley's manuscript chronicle, John Stow's Annales of England (1592), and Edmund Howes's editions of the Annales (1615, 1631). Using this case study, the article traces how the cultural memory of the dissolution was transformed according to the proclivities of individual chroniclers and with the changing preoccupations of successive generations. In doing so, it suggests the conventional historiography has fallen victim to Henrician narratives of the insignificance of the dissolution. Contemporary memorializing practices, it contends, may provide the key to recovering its significance as one of the most controversial events of the Henrician Reformation.
ISSN:2326-0726
Contains:Enthalten in: The sixteenth century journal