RT Book T1 Bishops and reform in the English church, 1520-1559 A1 Carleton, Kenneth LA English PP Suffolk PB Boydell & Brewer YR 2001 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/883290405 AB A daunting, multilateral, at times intractable subject, but one of vital importance to the understanding of church and state in the first half of the sixteenth century... an original contribution to ecclesiastical studies of the period. RECUSANT HISTORY. The English bishops played a crucial role in the process of Reformation in the sixteenth century, from the first arrival of continental Reformed thought to the virtual extinction of the office in 1559. This work has at its core the bishops' own understanding of the episcopate, drawn from their surviving writings and other contemporary discussions; such a study is key to understanding what became of the English Church of the middle ages and what it was to become under Elizabeth. Carleton examines the interplay between bishop and king, the episcopate in the context of other orders, and the social context of the office; he studies episcopal activity in key areas such as preaching, ordaining, and opposing heresy; and he notes the influence of the models which the bishops themselves set up as ideals, most notably Christ himself as the ideal bishop. The backgrounds of the bishops are set out in the appendix. NO Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 02 Oct 2015) CN BR377 SN 9781846150296 K1 Reformation : England. K1 Episcopacy : History of doctrines, 16th century. K1 Episcopacy : History of doctrines : 16th century K1 Reformation : England K1 Reformation ; England K1 Episcopacy ; History of doctrines ; 16th century K1 England ; Church history ; 16th century K1 England : Church history, 16th century. K1 England : Church history : 16th century