First edition of an eye-witness account of seventeenth-century England – the dark side of Pepys.
The
Entring Book is the longest and richest diary of public life in England during the era of the Glorious Revolution. Spanning the years 1677 to 1691, in nearly a million words, it records the downfall of the House of Stuart. This is a chronicle not only of politics and religion, but also of culture and society, gossip and rumour, manners and mores, in a teeming metropolis risen phoenix-like from the Great Fire. Its author, Roger Morrice, was a Puritan clergyman turned confidential reporter for leading Whig politicians – well-connected, a barometer of public opinion, and supremely well-informed. Written just twenty years after Pepys’s Diary, the
Entring Book depictsa darker England, thrown into a great crisis of `popery and arbitrary power’.
MARK GOLDIE lectures in History at the University of Cambridge and is a Fellow of Churchill College.
Table des matières
Foreward by Grayson Ditchfield
Politics and religion in the era of the
Entring Book
Roger Morrice: fragments of a life
The text of the
Entring Book
Puritan Whigs
Country Whigs
Middle way religion
The history of the Puritans
Epilogue: the
Entring Book and the historians
A propos de l’auteur
Mark Goldie is Emeritus Professor of Intellectual History in the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Churchill College. He has edited or authored 12 books and published more than 60 essays on British political, religious, and intellectual history in the period 1650-1800. Two of his books are published by Boydell and Brewer: The Entring Book of Roger Morrice and Roger Morrice and the Puritan Whigs.