A People’s Reformation
Building the English Church in the Elizabethan Parish
Format:Paperback
Publisher:McGill-Queen's University Press
Published:15th Apr '23
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The lived experience of the Reformation in Tudor England.
A People’s Reformation offers a reinterpretation of the English Reformation and the roots of the Church of England. Drawing on archival research, Lucy Kaufman argues that England became a Protestant nation not in spite of its people, but because of them – through their active social, political, and religious participation.
The Elizabethan settlement, and the Church of England that emerged from it, made way for a theological reformation, an institutional reformation, and a high political reformation. It was a reformation that changed history, birthed an Anglican communion, and would eventually launch new wars, new language, and even a new national identity.
A People’s Reformation offers a fundamental reinterpretation of the English Reformation and the roots of the Church of England. Drawing on archival material from across the United States and Britain, Lucy Kaufman examines the growing influence of state authority and the slow building of a robust state church from the bottom up in post-Reformation England. Situating the people of England at the heart of this story, the book argues that while the Reformation shaped everyday lives, it was also profoundly shaped by them in turn. England became a Protestant nation not in spite of its people but through their active social, political, and religious participation in creating a new church in England.
A People’s Reformation explores this world from the pews, reimagining the lived experience and fierce negotiation of church and state in the parishes of Elizabethan England. It places ordinary people at the centre of the local, cultural, and political history of the Reformation and its remarkable, transformative effect on the world.
“Kaufman illuminates the mechanisms by which conformity and commitment to the Protestant national church were enforced and fostered at the parochial level. It is commonplace that time did the work of the Reformation over the course of Elizabeth’s reign, as decade by decade the English people gradually became accustomed to life within a Protestant national church. Kaufman’s excellent study helps us better understand how this happened in the Church of England’s nearly ten thousand parishes and, along the way, it teaches the reader a great deal about how those parishes actually worked.” Fides et Historia
ISBN: 9780228016809
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
408 pages