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Renaissance Religion in Urban Scotland: The Dominican Order, 1450-1560
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In both detail and broad perspective this is a ground breaking study. It is the first book to be written on the Dominican Order in Scotland. Set in the early modern era, it opens with the place of ...
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25 April 2003

In both detail and broad perspective this is a ground breaking study. It is the first book to be written on the Dominican Order in Scotland. Set in the early modern era, it opens with the place of the Dominicans within the political history of the realm, arguing that the Dominicans had an independent and self-consciously Scottish identity. Then, various aspects of their work are covered; universities, law courts, prayers for the dead. Manuscripts of anniversary foundations reveal the urban patrons of the order, from whom the friars were, it is argued, recruited. Fresh examination of the antifraternal literature in Scotland sets it in its historical context for the first time and is brought to bear on the works of John Knox.
Price: $168.00
Pages: 348
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Studies in Medieval and Reformation Traditions
Publication Date:
25 April 2003
ISBN: 9789004129290
Format: Hardcover
'It’s hard to imagine that there is much more to say about the Dominicans in pre-Reformation Scottish towns than Janet Foggie has done in this book...Foggie's great contribution is her attention to he minutiae of the order's financial affairs and her conclusion that, unlike the Observant Franciscans, the Dominicans operated aggressively within the money economy of the early modern town.'
Margo Todd, Sixteenth Century Journal, 2005.
'...a study both well-planned and well-executed.'
Kathleen M. Comerford, Renaissance Quarterly, , 2004.
Margo Todd, Sixteenth Century Journal, 2005.
'...a study both well-planned and well-executed.'
Kathleen M. Comerford, Renaissance Quarterly, , 2004.
Janet P. Foggie, MA, BD, Ph.D. (1998) in Scottish History, University of Edinburgh. Is currently an Assistant Minister in the Church of Scotland.