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The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England, 1400-1580
  
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The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England, 1400-1580 [Hardcover]

Eamon Duffy
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 666 pages
  • Publisher: Yale University Press (2 Nov 1992)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0300053428
  • ISBN-13: 978-0300053425
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.7 x 6.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 931,229 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Eamon Duffy
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Review

'A mighty and momentous book... which reorders one's thinking about much of England's religious past.' Jack Scarisbrick, The Tablet; 'Duffy wants to show the vitality and appeal of late medieval Catholicism and to prove that it exerted a diverse and vigorous hold over the imagination and loyalty of the people up to the very moment of the Reformation. He succeeds triumphantly.' Susan Bridgen, London Review of Books; 'A magnificent scholarly achievement, a compelling read, and not a page too long.' Patricia Morrison, Financial Times; 'A landmark book in the history of the Reformation.' Ann Eljenholm Nichols, Sixteenth Century Journal; 'This book will afford enjoyment and enlightenment to layman and specialist alike. Duffy sweeps the reader along... by his lively and absorbing detail, his piercing insights, patient analysis, and his vigour in debates.' Peter Heath, Times Literary Supplement; 'Sensitively written and beautifully produced, this book represents a major contribution to the Reformation debate.' Norman Tanner, The Times; 'Deeply imaginative, movingly written, and splendidly illustrated.' Maurice Keen, The New York Review of Books' --The Tablet, London Review of Books, Financial Times, Sixteenth Century Journal, TLS, The Times, NYRB --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Description

This book offers a fundamental challenge to much that has been written about the pre-Reformation church. Eamon Duffy recreates 15th-century English laypeople's experience of religion, revealing the richness and complexity of the Catholicism by which men and women structured their experience of the world and their hopes within and beyond it. He then tells the story of the destruction of that Church - the stripping of the altars - from Henry VIII's break with the papacy until the Elizabethan settlement. Bringing together theological, liturgical, literary and iconographic analysis with historical narrative, Duffy argues that late medieval Catholicism was neither decadent nor decayed but was a strong and vigorous tradition, and that the Reformation represented a violent rupture from a popular and theologically respectable religious system. The first part of the book reviews the main features of religious belief and practice up to 1536. Duffy examines the factors that contributed to the close lay engagement with the structures of late medieval Catholicism: the liturgy; the impact of literacy and printing on lay religious knowledge; the conventions and contents of lay prayer; the relation of orthodox religious practice and magic; the Mass and the cult of the saints; and the lay belief about death and the afterlife. In the second part of the book Duffy explores the impact of Protestant reforms on this traditional religion, providing evidence of popular discontent from medieval wills and from parish records. He documents the widespread opposition to Protestantism during the reigns of Henry and Edward, discusses Mary's success in reestablishng Catholicism and describes the public resistance to Elizabeth's dismantling of parochial Catholicism that did not wane until the late 1570s.

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Customer Reviews

18 Reviews
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (18 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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59 of 64 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I would give it six stars if the computer would let me..., 24 Feb 2006
This book is not only meticulously researched and exhaustive on all the minutiae of common piety in late medieval/early modern England, it is far more readable and absorbing than such a weighty tome has any right to be. Duffy recreates a lost world in a way that is sensitive and sympathetic - the characters in the brief sketches he can offer from the sources become real people to us. Real quality.
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83 of 94 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A revolution in thinking about the English church., 11 Jan 2000
By A Customer
During the last 30 years there has been a revolution in our thinking about the 16th century English church. This has been the result of a vast body of and also a great deal of cross-referring to other primary sources, including the church buildings themselves. One of the richest fruits of all this research is this extraordinary book, which manages to capture in less than a thousand pages the full panoply of pre-Reformation liturgy and life, and how it was effectively destroyed by the reformers. This study and others like it confront head-on the received tradition of a moribund and corrupt medieval English church 'rescued' by the Reformation. This tradition arose largely from the enthusiasm of the Oxford Movement, and the Anglican revival for which it was responsible. This harnessed popular anti-Catholic prejudice in the 19th century, to create the illusion of a modern Church of England which had evolved naturally from the church of St Augustine and the mind of the medieval liturgy, stripped of its corruption and excesses. The Reformation was presented by these people as a smooth, evolutionary process, whereby roods, wallpaintings, etc., were removed from churches in the 16th century because of 'new liturgical practices' that no longer required them. Any idea that the Reformation in England was a violent and unpopular fracture was quietly lost. The obvious destruction that had taken place in English parish churches was most often attributed to the ultra-protestant Puritans of a century later. Duffy, however, documents in some detail how the churches of England were comprehensively wrecked between 1538 and 1553, and then again after Elizabeth I's accession in 1558. He uses documentary evidence to show how this happened in specific churches, particularly in East Anglia. He visits these churches, to examine the damage that was caused. Ironically, the dull-headed attempt by Mary I to restore the Catholic church to England in the 1550s has left us with a great deal of evidence of the destruction that had occurred up to that point. Today, in many church guides this destruction is still attributed to William Dowsing and his fellow-Puritans of the 1640s. They are not men to be blamed for nothing; but Duffy unfolds in this book an amazing story, one all too rarely told, of an earlier holocaust on a massive scale. It enhances our understanding of how English parish churches have come to look the way they do. It also has tremendous consequences for our thinking about the modern Anglican church. It has to be said that there are those who are not entirely comfortable with this revisionist history. Some find it difficult because of the way it contradicts the Reformation history that English people of a certain age have grown up with. Some others will find it hard to accept that late-medieval English Catholicism was popular. For Anglo-Catholics, there is the further difficulty that Duffy (and others) is suggesting that the Church of England is not the inheritor of the medieval English church in they way they had understood. One Suffolk vicar with whom I discussed this (he will remain nameless; in any case, he is now in the Exeter diocese) said "Duffy is nothing but a bog-Irish upstart". Any book that causes a reaction like that HAS to be worth reading.
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Magisterial, 2 Feb 2010
By 
Jeremy Bevan (West Midlands, UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This is one of those books for which the term `magisterial' can be used with complete justification. As a study of popular religion at the time of the Reformation, it's awesome in the breadth of its coverage, enquiring into areas as diverse as the guilds, the cult of the saints, the use of primers to inculcate knowledge of Scripture, the ways in which faith was reflected in Wills, populist preaching and much else. Its conclusion - that faith was much more alive and genuine than has long been thought - is, on the compendious evidence Duffy supplies, amply justified.

The second half of the book paints this popular religion onto the broader political canvas of Henry VIII's reforms, as consolidated by Edward VI and then countermanded by Mary. I thought Duffy was especially interesting on how the language of Wills, especially under Edward VI, disguised obdurate Catholicism in a kind of `civil disobedience' from beyond the grave. The fascinating section on the reforms (under Mary) of Cardinal Pole highlighted what, for me, was the book's one frustration: the failure to clearly depict how a Catholic strand of concern for social justice (as evidenced in the work of Pole) manifested itself in the life of the people. For example, how (if at all) opposition to the burning of `heretics' (either under Henry or Mary) was resisted. But this minor critique aside, a fascinating and mighty tome, surely destined to be the standard `revisionist' text on the period for a generation to come.
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