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The English Reformation

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This book presents a new edition of the classic study of the religious changes that transformed England in the sixteenth century. Henry VIII officially brought the Protestant Reformation to England in the 1530s when he severed the English Church from the Papacy. But the seeds of the movement, according to A.G.Dickens, were planted much earlier. The English Reformation, first published in 1964, follows the movement from its late medieval origins through the settlement of Elizabeth I in 1559 and the rise of Puritanism.

460 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1964

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About the author

A.G. Dickens

29 books6 followers
Arthur Geoffrey Dickens FBA, English academic and author.

Educated at Oxford, served in the military government of Lübeck from May to October 1945 and was appointed Professor of History at Hull in 1949.

Best known for his work on the English Reformation.

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Jan-Maat.
1,686 reviews2,497 followers
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January 14, 2019
"The place of the royal divorce in the history of the Reformation will always remain a subject for argument. Protestant writers have tended to dismiss it as a mere 'occasion' rather than a genuine cause; Catholics have sometimes regarded the divorce as the chief cause of the cataclysm and supposed that, had it not been pressed, England might well have remained a Catholic nation. To the present writer neither of these views seems wholly acceptable" (p154)

I bought A.G. Dickens' The English Reformation in the nineteen-eighties when I was an A-Level student. What with suffering from unrequited love and writing essays I never got round to reading it then. Perhaps if I had my History grade would have been better and I certainly would have had more to say in Tudor history classes. I was intending to move into phase two of my austerity reading project, one marked by deeper, even savage, demands on my bibliophilia, otherwise known as 'read & release'. The idea was that by alienating my ownership of some books I might possibly reduce the burden on shelf space. Alack, having read I find myself perilously close to 'read & retain' and no swift resolution to my book hoarding in sight.

Dickens starts off with three objectives in his account of the English Reformation - the process during which England moved out of Catholicism, towards Protestantism, back to Catholicism, then back again in a Protestantish direction in the sixteenth century. Those objectives were:
(i) to provide a thorough background on the pre-reformation English church
(ii) to describe the development & spread of protestantism in England, and
(iii) give a sense of how the Reformation affected ordinary people in England

I think that he fails, or to be reasonable, that he couldn't be completely successful in meeting those objectives because of the data available at the time, and one of the great things about this book is how much Dickens looks forward to future historians working through, in particular, diocesan records and exploring more of the reactions to the events of the period. At the same time I feel that the governments of the period would have had a poor sense of his second and third objectives too and a complete picture may well always allude us.

At the same time I feel that those objectives are a great example of the historiography and concerns of the time in which the book was written. There was Dickens in the 1960s, this was a great period of university expansion, and with it the stories that got told widened to embrace the kinds of people who were now coming to teach and study. As a result our historical memory became broader and richer. And while the great and the good were making decisions that determined the lives of everyday men and women, those decisions were also in reaction to the doings of people of low social rank and status.

However to start off with some downsides by the last chapter we find that not only is the author an Anglican (or Epistowhatemacallits as they are known in the USA and possibly other places too), a believer, and a supporter of a certain kind of belief in religious tolerance. I won't say that these ideas are wrong, they seem very nice, but it did strike me as odd to lay stress on the emergence of toleration and on those (few) who spoke up for toleration when one of the outcomes of the Reformation was a shift in who was included and who excluded from being part of the political nation, for example, down to 1829 Catholics were to be excluded from Public life in England (as also were various Protestant groups, no need to worry about the Jews because they were still officially banned from living in England until after the Civil War in the Seventeenth century - the roots of toleration may well be in Reformation but that plant took a long time to come to flower). And we note that during the Reformation numbers of people were burnt to death, tortured and general persecuted on account of what they believed. Toleration doesn't seem quite the right word.

At several points Dickens also seemed to have a concept of the ancestors as less "advanced", in the sense of being politically immature. You might be tempted to agree with that opinion, but it was written in 1964, and depending on your political persuasion there are a range of ways that one could find the general opinions of today more "advanced" than fifty odd years ago. I'm just uncertain that it is useful to measure things with such a wobbly yardstick. I suppose I'm also slightly suspicious of the use of language like 'advanced' during the time of de-colonialism.

All the same I lean towards read and retain even though this is a fifty year old book that is openly excited about what remains undiscovered in the archives & is well aware of the limits of what was known particularly about the reception of the Reformation. Partly because I found it thought provoking. The brick finally struck my head and I realised how weird Henry VIII's succession crisis in the early 1530s was. Why didn't he succeed in marrying off Mary ( of childbearing age by the time Henry reached his midlife 'succession ' crisis, or for that matter later betrothing Elizabeth (a teenager and so marriagable by Tudor standards by her father's death)? Does the fact that he didn't give us a useful insight into Henry's mind? A succession crisis born of his political failure and narcissism

Henry VIII emerges from Dickens' pages in an interesting manner - for all that he veered back towards Catholicism, particularly in his later years, all of his son's teachers were men known to be of Protestant inclinations. There's something curious in the captain of the ship insuring that his successor would swing the wheel and sharply change course.

Again I liked Dickens' generosity, the strong sense of contingency , and his consistent imaginative interest in what happened - for example seeing Mary's reign as a failure to institute a counter-reformation with her Cardinal, Reginald Pole, twice not responding to Ignatius of Loyola's offer to deploy Jesuits in England. For readers of Wolf Hall Thomas Cromwell is held up as the superstar statesman of Tudor, if not actually of Early-Modern, England, perhaps here an inspiration for Hilary Mantel.

Of particular interest was the hollowed out clergy. The senior clerics holding office in part as a result of government service, the junior clerics frequently under-educated, changing forms of religious expression with chantries still lively and popular while monasteries seem to have been in a long decline. The enigmatic flashes of continuity in religious expression, from Lollards to Quakers suggesting an ongoing need for personal, non-conformist, expressions of faith particularly in the towns where trades were well established , the importance of women active both among keen Protestants and keen Catholics, and perhaps most of all the "stunned" broad middle of the population, neither particularly Catholic nor Protestant but stumbling from one abrupt change from above to another.
Profile Image for Richard.
Author 6 books473 followers
February 6, 2017
This book is often cited in the bibliographies of books on church history, so I was excited to find a copy, especially since I'm interested in the Tudor era as well. To my chagrin, I found it to be a rather laborious read. However, the benefits of the book outweigh the disadvantages. This is a scholarly, well-researched and nuanced work on the Reformation in England.

It shows us that this movement cannot be simplified as easily as popular portrayals would have it. It was not merely the brainchild of a sexually frustrated tyrant. Nor was it a contest between Protestant good guys and Catholic bad guys. There were many religious, social and economic factors, some of them deeply rooted in England's past, which influenced the Reformation's emergence and affected the way it has played out over time down to the present (by which the author means the 1960s). This book corrects some commonly held misconceptions about people and phenomena; notable among these for me were Thomas Cromwell, the dissolution of the monasteries and Puritanism.
660 reviews34 followers
September 13, 2010
I think that Prof. Dickens, with his overarching view of trends, themes, events, and their unpredictability, would be very amused as a historian to see how The West has developed after his remarks at the close of the 1964 edition of this book. I'd like to see the later edition(s) if only to read these reactions. (The '64 edition happens to be the one on my shelf.)

Anyway, this is an excellent overview of the Reformation in England, one of the most exciting and far-reaching of historical developments. It references not only church history and the Big Names, but also the attraction of Reformation ideas to the regular person. It discusses the social and economic history and integrates it with or distinguishes it from history of religion. In particular, the narration of the dissolution of the monasteries is well done without any nostalgia for a likely non-existent past and with due regard to where the money went and how the release of formerly monastic lands led to lasting social change. His section on English exiles during the reign of Mary was very illuminating.

There are two last things to note. Mr. Dickens is a formal writer, but a superb writer. He is always elegant and understandable. His prose has a kind of modest periodicity. Next, his understanding of the humanity of the ideas and the people he is writing about is a pleasure. This book is a keeper.
Profile Image for Mindy aka serenity.
126 reviews5 followers
April 11, 2016
How does one write a review of a book so sweeping and dense, covering all of the intricacies of Protestantism’s rise in England from medieval times through Elizabeth I's reign? This book, hailed as the definitive volume on this subject because of its heavy use of primary sources, walks the reader through this momentous event in history, changing forever the way we act towards religion, its place in our lives, and its connection to government.
Dickens makes the argument that the Reformation didn't begin during Henry VIII’s quest for a divorce, but much earlier with the teachings of Wycliffe in the 14th century. Dickens cites Lollardry as a way-paver for later Lutheranism because of its similarity in core values. In fact, Lollards are credited in this book with anticipating all key Lutheran doctrines except for the Justification by Faith Alone. Wycliffe’s influence was felt not just in England but also on the continent, particularly in Germany and Switzerland. It is no great coincidence that these two areas brought about the next wave of reformist thinking- Lutheranism and Zwinglism- more than a century later.
The Reformation, in essence, is a call to give people a direct connection to their own religion, without the cloud of mysticism that Catholicism used to claim elite status on the teachings of God. It also called for structural change in the church, one that didn’t charge you for grace to line the pockets of the greedy clergy. To aid this cause, New Bible translations and prayer books were written in the 16th century common tongue and distributed among all classes in order to create a simpler and more heartfelt religion.
The heart of the Reformation’s rise is during the reign of Henry VIII. Henry was willing to overthrow the national religion if it would only give him his divorce. Wolsey aimed to assist but was not up to the task of the “great matter,” which left him open to harsh criticism and downfall. To the early Protestants, Wolsey was the personification of all that was wrong with the church: he lived opulently at the expense of others and was accused of performing his duties more out of personal ambition than any true religious calling or loyalty. This left room for a new point of view promoted by Cromwell, Cranmer, and others, mostly with Lutheran leanings due to its more humanistic approach to faith.
This period was full of conflict between church and state and how they should be connected. The church went from being controlled by Rome, to under the king as Supreme Head of all (Henry), to a tenuous reconciliation with Rome (Mary), to a compromise in which the monarch became Supreme Governor (Elizabeth), changing the position from a theological one to a more political one. These constant changes until Elizabeth’s reign made the climate very tense and inconsistent, with the definitions of heresy and national religion changing every few years.
Once Cromwell had control over a state-run Protestant national religion, it was time to reform. The monasteries were dissolved and all assets collected by the crown. Cromwell aimed to secure the monarchy financially into the future, but Henry's penchant for war soon made that a fantasy. As such, Henry's children went deeper into this technique, with guilds and chantries becoming the next targets during Edward’s reign. This did not place the reform movement in a very good light leading up to Mary’s Catholic ascendency.
Even though Mary killed nearly 500 Protestants for their faith alone which was not seen favorably by the English, the movement didn't fizzle. Many met secretly or corresponded with those who had voluntarily gone into exile. This act of congregating in fact strengthened the religion and promoted congregation, creating early structure for the Act of Uniformity under Elizabeth’s reign. She standardized church practice across the country and ceased the widespread persecution of people with different religious ideas, while creating a civil balance between rival faiths for a time. Dickens makes a special note that in his research he found that former exiles did not have the influence over Elizabeth’s church as they were once thought to have.
In conclusion, Dickens mentions that Protestantism is largely based on individual conscience, promoting a liberal and tolerant approach to faith. He states we should not view the English Reformation as a movement but a process, one that continues. It has cross-currents with matters of foreign influence and the secularization of ideas regarding culture, but came to define the English identity fundamentally. Dickens voices his hopes that this process will become even less vainglorious and more genuine in the future, possibly unraveling inconsistencies that still remain in the Anglican Church. Because at its heart, the Reformation is about obtaining the right to be closer to God without mysticism and obscurity getting in the way.
Profile Image for AskHistorians.
918 reviews4,509 followers
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September 24, 2015
This is one of the first and best works on the idea of the Reformation from Below, the idea that Protestantism was a popular grassroots movement vs a decaying, corrupt Catholic church. Subsequently heavily attacked by revisionists, it's still a vital book if only to understand the books that revised him.
Profile Image for Luke.
85 reviews11 followers
November 5, 2015
Excellent overview of the English Reformation, although not exactly for beginners - but that is not who it is aimed at specifically. It is insightful and well sourced, and certainly the prose. whilst dry, is understandable and to the point. I haven't any real complaint to make. Good.
Profile Image for Sara.
499 reviews
July 31, 2019
I'm intending to write more later, but for now, I was thrilled to discover this book. I read it after finishing C. F. Sansom's series of Shardlake novels set in Tudor England, running through the reign of the boy king Edward VI and Protector Somerset. It added quite a lot to my appreciation of Sansom.

Dickens examines the evidence for the 19th century romantic view of Catholicism in England and finds it wanting. He probably gives more examples than most people want to read but I found some of them fascinating, and really appreciated the debunking of the view that the majority of Englishmen wanted a return to the Catholicism of the scholastics. That Catholicism had most definitely fallen into decline; Dickens gives chapter and verse.

At the same time, he's even-handed when discussing Protestants, fully realizing the power that the discovery of the Bible in English had for even the illiterate working class (who often memorized great sections of it from simply hearing it read aloud by their literate friends). But many, perhaps the majority, were lukewarm worshippers (Protestant as well as Catholic).

I give 4 stars because at times his fine distinctions are a struggle to comprehend. But for the most part he writes with clarity and directness.

This is the second edition of this truly ground-breaking history. Christopher Haigh, who disagrees with Dickens on several points, nonetheless recommends it highly. That's a good sign.
Profile Image for Joel Zartman.
585 reviews23 followers
December 15, 2017
The English Reformation is, alas, important. The English pick through their moldering parish records, scraps of paper and nearly but not, again alas, entirely illegible letters, the tomes, edicts, acts and lists of yore endlessly fascinated with debating what it was their inconsequential ancestors got up to on that soggy island. Unfortunately, it matters, so we study English history. Dickens has abundant detail.
151 reviews1 follower
January 14, 2022
Excellent description of the reformation in England.
Profile Image for Flynn Evans.
199 reviews13 followers
July 2, 2024
Though certainly outdated in its insistence on a Whiggish teleology for the English Reformation, this text still holds up as a classic in the field.
Profile Image for Jack Webb.
1 review
August 9, 2015
"What a long night we silly souls endure, that lie sleepless, restless, burning and broiling in the dark fire one long night of many days, of many weeks, and some of many years together..."

...students - might be the be only ones left reading.

Which is a shame.
Garners one or two stars just for resembling a spell book.
48 reviews1 follower
October 6, 2011
One of the best books on the English Reformation to date.
1 review
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February 8, 2016
really good
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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