House rules Turn your mobile phone off. You must prepare for seminars by reading the set readings. Respect each other’s contributions in seminars: don’t.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Place your top 5 favourite historical events onto a piece of paper (one piece per event). What is ‘historical significance’?
Advertisements

Session 3: Renaissance and Religious Turmoil
Edexcel GCSE History - S H P Crime and Punishment Unit Revision Mindmaps – Core content By Mr Wallbanks.
May 15, Where are We Now? An estimated 5.1% of all persons in the U.S. will be confined in a State or Federal.
Anne Boleyn and British Protestantism By Cas Morris.
WAIMH Henry VIII.
Thomas Cromwell. Was born around 1485 Son of a cloth worker Spent his early life as a solider in Italy or a merchant in Antwerp. Around 1512, he went.
Who would you expect to be responsible for changes to a England’s laws? What if they were Religious Doctrine?
Seminar 3 Hidden Histories of Early Modern England.
The Reformation would have a greater political, social, and economic impact as it moved north.
Chapter One Introduction to the Bible and Its Influence.
The Reformation Spreads John Calvin  French lawyer  Influenced by Luther’s reformation  Started his own religion Called Calvinism  French lawyer.
Colonial Period Literature ( )
Modul ke: Fakultas Program Studi Writing 2 Subandi,S. Pd 10 Perencanaan dan Desain Teknik Sipil The Academic Writing Course focuses on development of academic.
Sir Thomas More and Religious Liberty Gary B. Doxey International Center for Law and Religion Studies at BYU June 13, 2012.
Conflict in the Middle East Mark Seivley July 21, 2006.
Notes – The Enlightenment was an 18 th century philosophical movement built off the achievements of the Scientific Revolution. The Enlightenment.
References & Bibliographies. What you will learn: What are references & bibliographies. Why provide references & bibliographies. Different styles of references.
Global AIS ABSOLUTISM. Just for reference TIMELINE.
European Culture Overview
Teaching skills in Advocacy with History. Association of Law Teachers Annual Conference, Nottingham Andrew
Crime and Society 5HUM1033 Adam Crymble. Why focus on the period between 1520 and 1780? Reformation and its consequences Religious dissent a crime State.
Reformation.
Mark Battye. Our approach: one specification Changes to DfE content requirements mean it is no longer necessary – or desirable – to have two different.
LAW AND POLITICS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to identify and evaluate the foundations of the American legal and political system.
Background Information for Reading Julius Caesar Ancient Rome and Shakespeare.
English Reformation. Henry VIII and Katherine of Aragon.
Lesson 1 Why study History?
Thomas Hobbes ( ) Moral and political philosopher Theorist of absolute rule, the disintegration of social and political order. Author of The Leviathan.
Citations. All specific, non- common knowledge must be cited: –Don’t cite: Henry VIII had six wives –CITE: Henry’s wife Anne Boleyn was critical in the.
Vocabulary Activity: Week 6 Latin Roots: ambi-, cent-, sect-/sec-, sent-
Using journals What is a journal? Why use them? How do I find good ones to use? How do I find locate them in the Library? What about referencing?
By: Robert Clark Period 7
LORALEN VOLIVA THE REFORMATION AND RELIGIOUS WARS OF THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD.
 starter activity What do these words, written in the margins of a prayer book as they worshipped together during morning Mass in around 1527 reveal about.
By: Angelique Hernandez, Daisy Hernandez, Vesna Luna, Vanessa Martinez
English Reformation. - series of events in 16th-century in England - associated with the process of the European Protestant reformation - religious and.
ENGLISH FOR LAWYERS II INTRODUCTION. Lecturer Prof.Dr. Lelija Sočanac Prof.Dr. Lelija Sočanac Office hours Monday – h, Gundulićeva 10, Room.
Christopher Hill: Marxist Historian. Background British historian who examined the history of the 17 th C. Born to a middle class Methodist family in.
Enquiry: Why was Matthew Hopkins able to become so successful?
20th Century History The United States of America YEAR Revision lecture.
The Renaissance and the Protestant Reformation. Renaissance - Summary The Renaissance is considered the start of Modern times because it is more like.
The Art of Communication: Instructional Strategies for Gifted Learners
ETHICS in the WORKPLACE © 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 1 Welcome to Ethics.
9 th Grade Research Project 2015_2016. Writing for History  10 Commandments of Historical Writing 10 Commandments of Historical Writing  5 steps 5 steps.
The Reformation What does reformation mean?
Past AP Test Questions Compiled by Eric Beckman Anoka HS, MN.
The Reformation A break from the religious ways thinking during the Middle Ages.
Feb 19 th Today in History: 1965 Fourteen Vietnam War protesters are arrested for blocking the United Nations’ doors in New York.Vietnam War Learning Target:
Research Methods and the Researched Argument Essay.
Ireland (Background to 1801) Re-Cap. Explain the significance of the following to the topic…
To Write an APE essay for the Henry VIII assessment.
Warm Up In your Progressive Era Notes, turn to your Common Vocabulary Unit 3 page. What do the following words mean? Write definitions down in your own.
The Reform of European Spiritual Life
To Write an APE essay for the Henry VIII assessment.
Extent of religious change in the 1530s
Henry and the final years of the church
5HUM0271 lecture 2: The “long eighteenth century”: historians’ overviews Katrina Navickas.
Gender, History and politics in Britain
The work due for today is…
Why did Henry VIII get married so often?
Henry’s Wives Activity 1 – Engage:
Henry VIII Later Foreign Policy
Why was producing an Heir so important to Henry VIII? Lesson 6
Assess the validity of this view
The work due for today is…
Divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded, survived…an overview
The work due for today is…
MLA Research Paper The Breakdown.
Unit 1: Part 1: Constitutional Underpinnings
Presentation transcript:

House rules Turn your mobile phone off. You must prepare for seminars by reading the set readings. Respect each other’s contributions in seminars: don’t dominate discussion, but don’t stay silent either! Remember etiquette when contacting tutors

Other information or Studynet – Module Information – has all the information you need, including how to access journal articles Studynet – Module Information guide-and-essential-tips.html guide-and-essential-tips.html

G. W. Bernard, ‘The Making of Religious Policy, : Henry VIII and the Search for the Middle Way’, Historical Journal, 41: 2 (1998), What are the key words used in the article? Where do you find the historian’s main argument? What is his main argument? What ideas or arguments is the historian arguing against?

How to make notes from journal articles: reading log Article: G. W. Bernard, ‘The Making of Religious Policy, : Henry VIII and the Search for the Middle Way’, Historical Journal, 41: 2 (1998), p.321 – ‘Henry VIII was: 1.The principal architect of religious policy 2.Not the plaything of factions 3.Religious policy did not fluctuate between reform and reaction. p.321 – ‘John Foxe’s Acts and Monuments... has so influenced most historians’ – reform was the work of Cromwell or Anne Boleyn or Cranmer... And that the kind was simply prisoner of his own advisors’. My questions and ideas = main argument = centres on Henry’s role = what previous historians argued and why i.e. Based on a book by John Foxe – what date?? – look up John Foxe briefly on Oxford Dictionary National Biography – Acts and Monuments was published 1563

Next week READ: John Walter and Keith Wrightson, ‘Dearth and the Social Order in Early Modern England’, Past and Present, 71 (1976), Think about the following questions in preparation for seminar discussion: What was the significance of authority and deference in early modern England? How did English society hold together in the face of extreme inequalities of wealth? What changed in this period? Additional reading: -John Walter, ‘Grain Riots and Popular Attitudes to the Law’, in John Brewer and John Styles, eds, An Ungovernable People: the English and their Law in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries (London, 1980), reprinted in John Walter, Crowds and Popular Politics in Early Modern England (Manchester 2006) -E.P. Thompson, ‘Plebeian Society, Plebeian Culture’, Journal of Social History, 7: 4 (1974) -Keith Wrightson, ‘The Social Order of Early Modern England’, in L. Bonfield et al, eds, The World We Have Gained: Histories of Population and Social Structure (Oxford, 1986)