Three English cathedrals and the early Reformation :
General Material Designation
[Thesis]
First Statement of Responsibility
Fisher, Richard
Subsequent Statement of Responsibility
Williamson, BethFisher, RichardWilliamson, Beth
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
University of Bristol
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2019
DISSERTATION (THESIS) NOTE
Dissertation or thesis details and type of degree
Thesis (Ph.D.)
Text preceding or following the note
2019
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
In the wide-ranging debates examining the nature of the Reformation in England little collective attention has been paid to the contribution of the nineteen medieval cathedrals and additional six created by Henry VIII. In this thesis the great churches and their communities at Hereford, Worcester and Gloucester are compared over the period 1509-1558, as neighbouring examples of secular, monastic and newly-founded cathedral sub-types, exploring the differing Reformations apparent at each place. Evidence is combined from the archival record, archaeological, architectural and art-historical findings to analyse how each cathedral community responded to this half-century of relentless religious change. All three cathedrals began the sixteenth century with widely differing incomes, personnel numbers, administrative regulations, buildings and liturgies. New statutes were centrally provided for the monastic institutions re-founded after dissolution, whilst the governance of the secular cathedrals remained substantially unaltered. The degree of integration of these great church institutions with their cities depended upon local factors such as their topographies, urban property ownership and burial practices. Considerable differences are also apparent in the attitude of the laity towards their cathedral, both between institutions and over the fifty-year period studied. Their core medieval function, of offering cyclical intercessory worship on a grand scale, was less suited to a Church advocating personal salvation and the supremacy of the Word. Significant variation occurred in the ways the cathedral church buildings and their contents were transformed by the Reformation, reflecting the degree to which change was encouraged and embraced or simply absorbed. Whilst these three institutions were demonstrably distinctive before the Church separated from Roman oversight, their reactions to the greater central control and confessional reverses of the Tudor monarchs left them just as diverse at the end of the period examined. Examining the cathedrals' idiosyncratic Reformations might then contribute additional facets to its accepted historiographic narratives.