Alec Ryrie: 5 books

Book cover of Protestants

Protestants

The Faith That Made the Modern World

by Alec Ryrie
Language: English
Release Date: April 4, 2017

**On the 500th anniversary of Luther’s theses, a landmark history of the revolutionary faith that shaped the modern world. ** "Ryrie writes that his aim 'is to persuade you that we cannot understand the modern age without understanding the dynamic history of Protestant Christianity.'...
Book cover of The Age of Reformation

The Age of Reformation

The Tudor and Stewart Realms 1485-1603

by Alec Ryrie
Language: English
Release Date: January 12, 2017

The Age of Reformation charts how religion, politics and social change were always intimately interlinked in the sixteenth century, from the murderous politics of the Tudor court to the building and fragmentation of new religious and social identities in the parishes. In this book, Alec Ryrie...
Book cover of The Sorcerer's Tale

The Sorcerer's Tale

Faith and Fraud in Tudor England

by Alec Ryrie
Language: English
Release Date: October 9, 2008

An earl's son, plotting murder by witchcraft; conjuring spirits to find buried treasure; a stolen coat embroidered with pure silver; crooked gaming-houses and brothels; a terrifying new disease, and the self-trained surgeon who claims he can treat it. This is the world of Gregory Wisdom, a physician,...
Book cover of Private and Domestic Devotion in Early Modern Britain
by Alec Ryrie
Language: English
Release Date: April 15, 2016

Scholars increasingly recognise that understanding the history of religion means understanding worship and devotion as well as doctrines and polemics. Early modern Christianity consisted of its lived experience. This collection and its companion volume (Worship and the Parish Church in Early Modern...
Book cover of Worship and the Parish Church in Early Modern Britain
by Alec Ryrie
Language: English
Release Date: February 11, 2016

The Parish Church was the primary site of religious practice throughout the early modern period. This was particularly so for the silent majority of the English population, who conformed outwardly to the successive religious upheavals of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. What such public conformity...
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