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03621aam a2200373 i 4500 001 E6CF6FF4CD0111ECB5E908A224ECA4DB 003 SILO 005 20220506010041 008 210813t20222022ne b 001 0 eng d 010 $a 2021950978 020 $a 9004382240 020 $a 9789004382244 035 $a (OCoLC)1263742141 040 $a YDX $b eng $e rda $c YDX $d EXC $d CDX $d DLC $d JES $d OCLCO $d OCLCF $d OHX $d SILO 043 $a e-uk-en $a e-uk-en 050 4 $a DA315 C36 2022 245 04 $a The Cambridge connection in Tudor England : $b humanism, reform, rhetoric, politics / $c edited by John F. McDiarmid and Susan Wabuda. 246 3 $a Humanism, reform, rhetoric, politics 264 1 $a Leiden ; $b Brill, $c [2022] 300 $a xiv, 346 pages ; $c 25 cm. 490 1 $a St Andrews studies in Reformation history, $x 2468-4317 504 $a Includes bibliographical references and index. 505 00 $g Part 3. Cambridge humanists and the polity. $t The end of the Cambridge connection / $r Glyn Parry. $g Part 1. The starting point for the Athenians: classical rhetoric and its Tudor applications. $t Perfecting eloquence, perfecting England: the pattern of Cambridge humanist thought / $r John F. McDiarmid -- $t Disputed sounds: Thomas Smith on the pronunciation of ancient Greek: representing the evanescent in sound and image / $r Richard SImpson -- $t John Cheke's Greek scholarship in translation / $r Andrew W. Taylor -- $g Part 2. Cambridge humanists and the English Reformation. $t 'We walk as pilgrims': Agnes Cheke and Cambridge, c. 1500-1549 / $r Susan Wabuda -- $t New perspectives on Cambridge's role in the religious reformation: Roger Ascham and the early Edwardian religious debates at the University / $r Lucy Rachel Nicholas -- $t The Cambridge connection and the 'strangeness' of Italian reformers, 1547-1556 / $r M. Anne Overell -- $g Part 3. Cambridge humanists and the polity. $t 'Commonweal men' and the government of mid-Tudor England / $r Alan Bryson -- $t Civil instructions: ordering the godly commonweal in John Cheke's marital correspondence / $r Cathy Shrank -- $t The Cambridge connection and the shaping of the Elizabethan state / $r Norman Jones -- $t The Cambridge connection and the early Elizabethan diplomatic corps / $r Tracey A. Sowerby -- $t A continuing connection: the Cambridge group and the University of Cambridge, c. 1547-1598 / $r Ceri Law -- $t The end of the Cambridge connection / $r Glyn Parry. 520 $a "This book highlights the famous 'Athenian tribe': a group of humanist scholars in the reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI and Elizabeth I, who resolved many difficult problems concerning the Tudor succession, diplomacy, and the English Church. They included Sir John Cheke as their early leader, and with him, Roger Ascham, Thomas Smith, and John Ponet. William Cecil, Lord Burghley, Queen Elizabeth's invaluable chief minister, was the most influential of them all. The Cambridge Connection explores the interdependency of scholarship, politics, and religion in the sixteenth century. The 'Athenian tribe' was essential to the shaping of mid-Tudor cultural life. They left a lasting imprint on early modern England."----Publisher's webpage. 651 0 $a England $x Intellectual life $y 16th century. 651 0 $a Great Britain $x Politics and government $y 1485-1603. 651 0 $a England $x Religion $y 16th century. 700 1 $a McDiarmid, John F., $d 1947- $e editor. 700 1 $a Wabuda, Susan, $e editor. 830 0 $a St. Andrews studies in Reformation history. 941 $a 1 952 $l USUX851 $d 20220902015653.0 956 $a http://locator.silo.lib.ia.us/search.cgi?index_0=id&term_0=E6CF6FF4CD0111ECB5E908A224ECA4DB 994 $a C0 $b IWAInitiate Another SILO Locator Search