Mark Goldie’s authoritative and highly readable introduction to the political and religious landscape of Britain during the turbulent era of later Stuart rule.
An exceptionally significant monograph, and without doubt one of the most important to appear in the field of Restoration history in the last twenty years. Mark Goldie has done more than anyone else to illuminate the political and religious assumptions of late seventeenth-century Englishmen.’ Dr Grant Tapsell, University of Oxford.
Roger Morrice and the Puritan Whigs explains a movement, illuminates the world of its emblematic representative, and explores one of the most remarkable documents of the seventeenth century.
Morrice’s
Entring Book was supremely well-informed, passionately committed, and relentlessly opinionated. Chronicling the years 1677 to 1691, nearly a million words in length, it is the fullest surviving record of the tumultuous final years of the Stuart regime, from the Popish Plot and Exclusion Crisis to the Glorious Revolution.
Morrice was a Puritan clergyman turned confidential reporter for leading Whig politicians, a barometer of opinion, for whom reliable information was vital for public action. Just twenty years after Pepys’s
Diary, the
Entring Book depicts a darker England, gripped by a new crisis of ‘popery and arbitrary government’.
Mark Goldie’s deeply considered book examines the fortunes of Puritanism in the later Stuart age. It offers a story of disillusion and diminuendo, ofstruggles for survival in the face of intolerance, and of self-understanding among those who hoped to transform England through ‘Godly rule’.
Yet the book also tells a countervailing story of revitalized and transformed Puritanism. Puritans worked through parliament, the royal court, and the households of gentry, merchants, lawyers, and clergy. Setting out to galvanize civil society, they mobilized public opinion, organized electorates, and deployedthe arts of journalism, influence, and persuasion.
This book has been adapted, with a new substantial introduction and updated bibliography, from the first volume of the
Entring Book of Roger Morrice.
Mark Goldie is Professor of Intellectual History at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Churchill College.
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Introduction
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
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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.