"Under Felt Hats and Worsted Stockings": The Uses of Conscience in Early Modern English Coroners' Inquests

This article explores how ordinary people—those below the ranks of the educated elite—understood and made use of conscience in the years after the Reformation. While much is known about the ideas of heologians and legal scholars regarding this issue, no other work has attempted to recover popular no...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Loar, Carol (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Sixteenth Century Journal Publishers, Inc. 2010
In: The sixteenth century journal
Year: 2010, Volume: 41, Issue: 2, Pages: 393-414
Online Access: Volltext (JSTOR)
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Parallel Edition:Non-electronic
Description
Summary:This article explores how ordinary people—those below the ranks of the educated elite—understood and made use of conscience in the years after the Reformation. While much is known about the ideas of heologians and legal scholars regarding this issue, no other work has attempted to recover popular notions of conscience. This article argues that coroners' inquests reveal the early modern shift from the objective understanding of conscience to the newer, subjective understanding. Jurors and the kings' almoners employed conscience in different ways and for different purposes; the almoners' suits suggest that this shift in the understanding of conscience may have been a "bottom-up" movement in which the jurors utilized the idea of a subjective conscience while the almoner retained the older, objective conscience until later in the seventeenth century.
ISSN:2326-0726
Contains:Enthalten in: The sixteenth century journal