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Ignatius Loyola and Reginald Pole: A Reconsideration
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 February 2009
Extract
‘Revisionist’ historians, led by David Loades, have begun to reexamine various aspects of the reign of Mary Tudor and thus to challenge traditional interpretations. Anyone considering the religious history of that period eventually encounters Cardinal Reginald Pole's refusal to accept into England some members of the newly founded Society of Jesus. Concurrent with the reappraisal of Mary's reign, a similar re-examination has dominated early Jesuit historiography. This work, which has generally passed unnoticed by Tudor historians, highlights the encouragement and support that the Society received from reformers, spirituali such as Cardinal Gasparo Contarini and Cardinal Giovanni Morone and, equally important, the attacks that both suffered from their common critics, for example from Gian Pietro Carafa (later Pope Paul iv), and Melchor Cano. One of that circle was Cardinal Reginald Pole. As research elucidates the relationship between that group and the Jesuits, it adds a new dimension to the old question: why did Pole resist Jesuit involvement in the restoration of English Catholicism? It is the purpose of this article to bring the two fields together and so first to demonstrate how developments in Jesuit historiography challenge established views and, second, to propose a more plausible interpretation.
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References
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19 Pol. Chron. iv. 310–11. One wonders whether Ignatius' decision reflects one of the most important aspects of the marriage treaty between Mary Tudor and Philip of Spain: the creation of a new northern state out of England and the Spanish Netherlands to contain France: Lynch, John, Spain 1516–1598: from nation state to world empire, Oxford 1991, 134 Google Scholar.
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80 Both Fenlon, Dermot (Heresy and obedience, 257)Google Scholar and A. G. Dickens offer the same conclusion. In Dickens's, words ‘It remains very possible that Pole foresaw the hostility which the mass-introduction of a “Spanish” Order might provoke in England’: The English Reformation, 2nd edn, London 1989, 427 n. 73Google Scholar. Haigh, Christopher also suggests this possibility in his cautious evaluation of Pole's refusal: ‘Controversial preaching by a rigorist order with foreign experience and leadership might have been disruptive, and it would have been some years before English (or English-speaking) Jesuits could be trained’: English reformations, 224 Google Scholar.
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