Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 October 2016
“I am a Christian, who never changed that Religion, that I drank in with my milke: nor ever, I thanke God, was ashamed of my profession”, James declared in 1608, in his Apology for the Oath of Allegiance. Five years earlier he had reminded the members of his first English Parliament that as “I am no stranger to you in blood, no more am I a stranger to you in Faith, or in matters concerning the house of God. And although this my profession be according to mine education wherein (I thanke God) I sucked the milk of God’s trewth, with the milke of my nurse: yet do I here protest unto you, that I would never … have so firmly kept my first profession if I had not found it agreeable to all reason and to the rule of my conscience.”
A paper read to the 13th Conference on Post-Reformation Catholic History, at St Anne's College, Oxford, 7 August 1970.
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4 Workes, p. 301.
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6 Ibid., pp. 472-3 discusses this in detail.
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9 Ibid., p. 112 f.
10 Codex Barberini 32, quoted by Bellesheim, 3, p. 223.
11 The report is printed with translation by Anderson, W. J. in The Innes Review, Vol. 7 (1956), pp. 27–59, and this version is quoted here as Abercromby. CrossRefGoogle Scholar
12 The importance of commonplace books during the Reformation cannot be over-exaggerated. They were handbooks of quotations which, because of their convenience and price, enjoyed a relatively wide circulation; and inevitably they provided many of the parish clergy with authoritative sayings, though not infrequently divorced from their original context. Therein lay their danger.
13 Abercromby, p. 36.
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16 Ibid.
17 Ibid., p. 42.
18 Ibid., p. 43.
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23 Fondo Borghese, Series I, Vol. 915, ff. 44v-45r [Hereafter F.B. followed by Series and Vol.]
24 Ibid., I, 915, f. 58rv.
25 Ibid., ff. 73v-74r.
26 Ibid., ff. 93r-94r.
27 Brodrick, p. 279.
28 F.B. I, 915, f. 218v.
29 Ibid., ff. 224v.
30 Ibid., ff. 227v-230v.
31 Ibid., ff. 237r-238v.
32 Ibid., ff. 254v-256r.
33 Ibid., ff. 264v-265r.
34 Ibid., f. 289rv.
36 Ibid., ff. 35v-36r.
37 Ibid., f. 50v.
38 [Du Perron, J.] The Reply of the Most Illustrious Cardinal of Perron to the Answeare of theMost Excellent King of Great Britain (Douai, 1630), pp. 3 ff.Google Scholar
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