Religious History of Britain seminar (IHR) on 25 March: reminder from Eilish Gregory (pasted)
A reminder that our final seminar of this academic term will be taking place this
Tuesday 25 March in-person only at 5pm (GMT) at Lambeth Palace Library in collaboration with the
Friends of Lambeth Palace Library. Please note the earlier time and change of venue.
The seminar paper will be given by our convenor Dr Arnold Hunt
(Durham) entitled 'The Forgotten Laudian? Richard Steward (1595-1651)
and the Origins of Anglican High Churchmanship', with a copy of his
paper abstract below:
'Richard Steward (1595-1651) played a key role in the promotion of
Laudianism in the 1630s and the formation of Anglican royalism in the
1640s. During the Uxbridge negotiations in 1645, he exerted a decisive
influence in persuading the king not to compromise
on episcopacy, and after Charles’s execution in 1649 he continued to
play an influential role in holding together the exiled royalist
community and arguing against any accommodation with the Commonwealth
regime. Yet his significance as a Laudian ideologue
and preacher remains obscure, largely because his sermons never
appeared in print during his lifetime.
This paper will reconstruct Steward’s career and situate his sermons in
their original context in the 1620s in order to highlight his importance
as a central figure in the development of Laudianism'.
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