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- Contains open access
- ISSN: 0424-2084 (Print), 2059-0644 (Online)
- Editors: Revd Professor Charlotte Methuen University of Glasgow, UK, and Professor Andrew Spicer Oxford Brookes University, UK
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Published for the Ecclesiastical History Society, Cambridge.Studies in Church History is an annually published series comprising papers and communications delivered at the Ecclesiastical History Society's conferences. Each volume presents important new work, by established as well as new scholars, on a particular theme. Volumes are available to members of the society at a reduced price.
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EHS Blog
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Standing on the Verge of Time: John Sprott (1780-1869)
- 10 March 2024,
- Stephen Steele is minister of Stranraer Reformed Presbyterian Church. He has an MA in history from Queen’s University Belfast, where his focus was on...
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Papal Judges-Delegate in Twelfth- and Early Thirteenth-Century England
- 06 February 2024,
- Callum Jamieson is a University Tutor at the University of Glasgow. He successfully defended his PhD thesis in December 2023 that was entitled ‘Papal Judges-Delegate...
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Introducing: Michael Snape
- 22 January 2024,
- Canon Professor Michael Snape is the inaugural Michael Ramsey Professor of Anglican Studies at Durham University. My first role in the Ecclesiastical History...
Ecclesiastical History Society Podcasts
Ecclesiastical history on the Cambridge Core Blog
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Jacobite Past, Loyalist Future: George Hay and the Development of Catholic Loyalism
- 28 February 2022,
- How did a Scottish Catholic bishop who as a young man was imprisoned for participating in the 1745 Jacobite Rebellion help his community enter mainstream political...
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Locke, Toleration and Political Participation – A New Manuscript
- 04 November 2021,
- Locke’s arguments for toleration are well-known and immensely influential. Less well-known, but of equal import to his worldview, are the exceptions he made...
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The Society of Astrologers (c.1647-1684): Promoting Astrology in Church and in the Pub
- 29 March 2021,
- People facing plague and quarantine in early modern Europe also turned to astrologers. But rather than being chastised for supporting a ‘pseudoscience’, these...
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