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"Professor Alison Rowlands has been instrumental in how we understand the history of European witch hunts and witch trials. Her work is shaping education around this dark period in our history and ensuring that the accused and the complex stories of why they were persecuted are never forgotten. She explains why its so important that we remember those victims who were labelled as witches"
"The Church is fracturing, revolution is brewing, and society is changing rapidly. Three authors who shaped this new world with their pens—Martin Luther, Desiderius Erasmus, and Philipp Melanchthon—will now be shaped by it in turn. When the pope and King Henry VIII of England pressure Erasmus to take a public stand against Luther, both authors will be forced to wrestle with literal and figurative demons. Erasmus is haunted by his illegitimate birth. Luther struggles with the rejection of the Church and his own father. Melanchthon, Luther’s associate and a long-time admirer of Erasmus, is increasingly caught in the middle, forced to choose between two men he venerates or be torn asunder. The three men’s lives and fears are woven together as events spiral out of their collective control."
Monograph: Shakespeare and Islam
Shakespeare through Islamic Worlds. Ambereen Dadabhoy introduces her monograph on "the coded ways in which Islam and Muslims appear" in Shakespeare's plays.
The Reformation and Violence. The 31st Annual Conference of the Society for Reformation Studies. Hybrid event, Tue, 8 Apr 2025 14:00 - Thu, 10 Apr 2025 15:00 BST.
From the Margins to the Centre in Seventeenth-Century England. Essays in Honour of Bernard Capp. Essays by Richard Blakemore, Heather Falvey, Jasmine Kilburn-Toppin, Anu Korhonen, Peter Marshall, Angela McShane, Elaine Murphy, Naomi Pullin and Tim Reinke-Williams.
"Novel studies of hermits, sailors and surgeons, as well as shedding fresh light on topics such as the politics of the parish, the lives of plebeian women, men's emotions, and the cultural worlds of 'Jane' Shore and John Taylor the Water-Poet." Edited by Angela McShane and Tim Reinke-Williams. Volume 54 of Studies in Early Modern Cultural, Political and Social History. To be published in May 2025.
Hi, Bluesky! Allow me to (re)introduce myself by sharing the cover of my forthcoming book, Shakespeare in Tongues, which will be published by Routledge in the Spotlight on Shakespeare series next year. Many thanks to artist Fausto Fernandez for permission to use his gorgeous collage!
Throughout the medieval and early modern periods, Europeans regularly consumed medical remedies that were made from human corpses. And, like, fresh corpses too.
18 Nov. 1664 #OTD Alice Thornton wrote to her husband telling them that she had been to attend the baptism of his sister's son, Timothy, in Malton, borrowing a coach from Lady Cholmley, and that she would like him ‘to get me some pretty fashioned silver cups for him.’
#EarlyModern 🗃️
I have only just become aware of this incredible depiction of St Thomas More trying to persuade Henry VIII that he shouldn't try to to hold it in and should just have a pee https://t.co/by7V1TJROE
Sadly, the parallel-text online edition of Holinshed's Chronicles which I prepared with Ian Archer, Felicity Heal & Henry Summerson, & which back in 2010 was a pioneering digital resource - it facilitated comparison of the 1577 and 1587 texts at the click of a mouse, is no more. https://t.co/MUXqG2pGnm