Mục lục
Preface: Ann Hughes as historian, friend and mentor – Peter Lake
Introduction: rethinking public politics in the English Revolution – Peter Lake and Jason Peacey
1 ‘Great conformitants’ and ‘right ambidexters’: puritans, conformity and the challenge of Laudianism – Anthony Milton
2 Killing (Catholic) officers no crime? The politics of religious violence in England in 1640 – John Walter
3 Anatomy of the General Rising: militancy and mobilisation in London, 1643 – David Como
4 ‘In the hollow of his wooden leg’: the transmission of civil war materials, 1642–9 – Karen Britland
5 Puritanism, parish and polemic in civil war London: the case of Thomas Bakewell – Elliot Vernon
6 William Walwyn’s Montaigne and the struggle for toleration in the English Revolution – David Loewenstein
7 An accursed family: the Scottish crisis and the Black Legend of the House of Stuart, 1650–2 – Thomas Cogswell
8 Indemnity, sovereignty and justice in the army debates of 1647 – Sean Kelsey
9 Milton and Winstanley: a conversation – Thomas N. Corns
10 Women, print and locality: Richard Culmer and the practices of polemic during the English Revolution – Jason Peacey
11 ‘Threshing among the people’: Ranters, Quakers and the revolutionary public sphere – Kate Peters
Index