2000
DOI: 10.1086/386208
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“The Good Ministrye of Godlye and Vertuouse Women”: The Elizabethan Martyrologists and the Female Supporters of the Marian Martyrs

Abstract: The images that the phrase “Marian Protestant” summons to mind are both dramatic and predictable. Whether they are of Cranmer holding his hand in the flame, Latimer exhorting Ridley to play the man, or more generalized images of men and women dying at the stake, we see the landscape of Marian Protestantism shrouded in the smoke from the fires of Smithfield and think of it exclusively in terms of martyrs. This unblinking fixation on the Marian martyrs is partly the result of an all too human fascination with vi… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…They then used various mathematical tools to measure the centrality of each of its members. The results of this analysis brought their attention to people who have been traditionally overlooked by other scholars, including various female members such as Joyce Hales and Margery Cooke (Ahnert and Ahnert, 15 and elsewhere Freeman, 13). It also highlighted that letter carriers and financial sustainers (people who held the network together) were more important than they suspected; and ‘that their significance increased as the martyrs died’ (Ahnert and Ahnert, 3‐4).…”
Section: Top 20 Letter Betweennessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They then used various mathematical tools to measure the centrality of each of its members. The results of this analysis brought their attention to people who have been traditionally overlooked by other scholars, including various female members such as Joyce Hales and Margery Cooke (Ahnert and Ahnert, 15 and elsewhere Freeman, 13). It also highlighted that letter carriers and financial sustainers (people who held the network together) were more important than they suspected; and ‘that their significance increased as the martyrs died’ (Ahnert and Ahnert, 3‐4).…”
Section: Top 20 Letter Betweennessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…as Thomas s. freeman has remarked, "to ignore the majority of Marian Protestants who did not die for the gospel is to study the steeple and believe that you have examined the entire church." 8 i. reconsTrUcTing an ePisToLary coMMUniTy reconstructing the church beneath the steeple requires a combination of archival work and computational analysis. The 289 letters that form the basis of this study are scattered throughout foxe's papers and publications, and two further print sources: many of the letters were printed in foxe's "book of Martyrs," first published in 1563, and the associated publication Certain Most Godly, Fruitful 9 Many of the printed letters also survive in manuscript and holograph versions in foxe's papers, held in the british Library and emmanuel college Library, cambridge.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Journal articles by members of the project have also opened up aspects of Foxe that were previously untouched: although Anne Askew is one of the most famous of Foxe's martyrs, without Thomas Freeman's work we would be unaware of the 'female sustainers' and Foxe's treatment of them in the Book of Martyrs. 9 Only an accident of periodisation could leave later seventeenth-century religious prose unmentioned. The work of Nigel Smith on Civil War religious radicals and that of Neil Keeble on the literature of Non-conformists continue to offer an example of how historically and theological informed readings of such material can bring it alive for the modern reader.…”
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confidence: 99%