Studies in Church Historyvol. 1, ed. C. W. Dugmore and Charles Duggan (1964)

C. N. L. BrookeProblems of the church historian 1–19

T. M. ParkerArminianism and Laudianism in seventeenth-century England20–34

M. D. Knowles, O.S.B.Some recent work on early Benedictine history (presidential address)35–46

Aubrey Gwynn, S.J.The Irish missal of Corpus Christi College, Oxford47–68

James ParkesJews and Christians in the Constantinian Empire69–79

E. F. JacobReflections upon the study of general councils in the fifteenth century80–97

R. McL. WilsonThe gospel of Philip98–103

Gerald BonnerAugustine’s visit to Caesarea in 418104–13

Geoffrey G. WillisWhat is Mediana week?114–17

R. A. MarkusDonatism: the last phase118–26

Eric Fletcher, M.P.Birinus and the church at Wing127–31

Charles DugganPrimitive decretal collections in the British Museum132–44

C. J. GodfreyThe archbishopric of Lichfield145–53

P. J. Dunning, C.M.The letters of Pope Innocent III to Ireland154–9

D. M. NicolMixed marriages in Byzantium in the thirteenth century160–72

Decima L. DouieArchbishop Pecham’s register173–5

Dorothy M. OwenEly diocesan records176–83

C. M. D. CrowderCorrespondence between England and the Council of Constance, 1414–18184–206

Patrick CollinsonThe beginnings of English sabbatarianism 207–21

H. A. Lloyd JukesPeter Gunning, 1613–84: scholar, churchman, controversialist222–32

W. R. WardOxford and the origins of liberal Catholicism in the Church of England233–52

Peter HinchliffThe theology of graduation: an experiment in training colonial clergy253–7

Studies in Church Historyvol. 2, ed. G. J. Cuming (1965)

C. W. DugmoreThe study of the origins of the Eucharist: retrospect and revaluation(presidential address) 1–18

E. C. RatcliffThe Old Syrian baptismal tradition and its resettlement under the influence of

Jerusalem in the fourth century19–37

Steven RuncimanThe Greek church under the Ottoman Turks38–53

J. N. Bakhuizen van den Brink Ratramm’s eucharistic doctrine and its influence in sixteenth-century England54–77

Walter UllmannThe papacy as an institution of government in the Middle Ages78–101

S. L. GreensladeThe unit of pastoral care in the early church102–18

Joel HurstfieldChurch and State, 1558–1612: the task of the Cecils119–40

W. H. C. FrendA note on the Great Persecution in the West141–8

G. G. WillisCursus in the Roman canon149–53

P. H. BriegerBible illustration and Gregorian reform154–64

Anne HeslinThe coronation of the Young King in 1170165–78

Charles DugganA Durham canonical manuscript of the late twelfth century179–85

H. M. R. E. Mayr-HartingMaster Silvester and the compilation of early English decretal collections186–96

J. A. WattMediaeval deposition theory: a neglected canonist consultatio from the First

Council of Lyons197–214

J. W. GrayArchbishop Pecham and the decrees of Boniface215–19

Michael WilksPredestination, property, and power: Wyclif’s theory of dominion and grace220–36

Robert PetersWho compiled the sixteenth-century patristic handbook Unio dissidentium?237–50

J. A. F. ThomsonJohn Foxe and some sources for Lollard history: notes for a critical appraisal251–7

Patrick CollinsonThe role of women in the English Reformation illustrated by the life and

friendships of Anne Locke258–72

M. C. CrossAn example of lay intervention in the Elizabethan church273–82

Basil HallPuritanism: the problem of definition283–96

Leland H, CarlsonA corpus of Elizabethan nonconformist writings297–309

A. C. CarterTwo interesting documents found in the register of the consistory at the English

church in Amsterdam310–19

Graham HowesDr Arnold and Bishop Stanley320–37

Studies in Church Historyvol. 3, ed. G. J. Cuming (Leiden, 1966)

S. L. GreensladeReflections on early Christian topography (presidential address)1–22

D. H. NewsomeThe churchmanship of Samuel Wilberforce23–47

J. W. GrayCanon law in England: some reflections on the Stubbs–Maitland controversy48–68

Torben ChristensenF. D. Maurice and the contemporary religious world69–90

Patrick CollinsonEpiscopacy and reform in England in the later sixteenth century91–125

Rosalind HillChristianity and geography in early Northumbria126–39

R. A. MarkusReflections on religious dissent in North Africa in the Byzantine period140–9

G. S. M. WalkerErigena’s conception of the sacraments150–8

C. R. CheneyA recent view of the general interdict on England, 1208–1214159–68

A. J. CosgroveThe elections to the bishopric of Winchester, 1290–2169–78

C. T. AllmandSome effects of the last phase of the Hundred Years War upon the maintenance

of clergy179–90

J. F. DavisLollard survival and the textile industry in the south-east of England191–201

Basil HallJohn Calvin, the jurisconsults and the ius civile202–16

D. M. OwenSynods in the diocese of Ely in the latter Middle Ages and the sixteenth century217–22

Robert PetersThe notion of the Church in the writings attributed to King James VI & I223–31

A. M. C. CarterJohn Robinson and the Dutch Reformed Church232–41

H. A. L. JukesA tribute to Bishop Skinner242–6

G. J. CumingTwo fragments of a lost liturgy247–53

G. G. WillisIn earth, as it is in heaven254–7

G. V. BennettAn unpublished diary of Archbishop William Wake258–66

R. B. KnoxThe Wesleys and Howell Harris267–76

W. R. WardThe cost of Establishment: some reflections on church building in Manchester277–89

Studies in Church Historyvol. 4: The Province of York, ed. G. J. Cuming (Leiden, 1967)

J. S. PurvisThe archives of York1–14

H. M. R. E. Mayr–HartingPaulinus of York15–21

R. B. DobsonThe foundation of perpetual chantries by the citizens of medieval York22–38

A. G. DickensSecular and religious motivations in the Pilgrimage of Grace

(presidential address)39–64

D. M. LoadesThe collegiate churches of Durham at the time of the Dissolution65–75

Philip TylerThe status of the Elizabethan parochial clergy76–97

Hugh AvelingSome aspects of Yorkshire Catholic recusant history, 1558–179198–121

Claire CrossAchieving the Millennium: the church in York during the Commonwealth122–42

A. M. G. StephensonArchbishop Vernon Harcourt143–54

Studies in Church History vol.5: The Church and Academic Learning, ed. G. J. Cuming (Leiden, 1969)

A. B. CobbanEpiscopal control in the medieval universities of northern Europe1–22

D. M. NicolThe Byzantine church and Hellenistic learning in the fourteenth century23–57

J. R. WrightThe supposed illiteracy of Archbishop Walter Reynolds58–68

M. J. WilksThe early Oxford Wyclif: papalist or nominalist?69–98

F. D. LoganAnother cry of heresy at Oxford: the case of Dr John Holand, 141699–113

Basil HallThe trilingual college of San Ildefonso and the making of the Complutensian

polyglot Bible114–46

J. S. PurvisThe literacy of the later Tudor clergy in Yorkshire147–65

R. M. HainesSome arguments in favour of plurality in the Elizabethan church166–92

H. A. Lloyd JukesDegory Wheare’s contribution to the study and teaching of ecclesiastical

history in England in the seventeenth century193–203

Studies in Church History vol. 6: The Mission of the Church and the Propagation of the Faith, ed. G. J. Cuming (Cambridge, 1970)

A. P. VlastoThe mission of SS. Cyril and Methodius and its aftermath in Central Europe1–16

L. G. D. BakerThe shadow of the Christian symbol17–28

R. A. MarkusGregory the Great and a papal missionary strategy29–38

G. S. M. WalkerSt Columban: monk or missionary?39–44

C. H. TalbotSt Boniface and the German mission45–58

C. N. L. BrookeThe missionary at home: the church in the towns, 1000–1250 (presidential

address)59–84

C. R. BoxerThe problem of the native clergy in the Portuguese and Spanish Empires from

the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries85–106

A. F. WallsA Christian experiment: the early Sierra Leone colony107–30

Peter HinchliffThe selection and training of missionaries in the early nineteenth century131–6

G. HuelinThe church’s response to the cholera outbreak of 1866137–48

S. C. NeillThe history of missions: an academic discipline149–70

Studies in Church Historyvol. 7: Councils and Assemblies, ed. G. J. Cuming and Derek Baker (Cambridge, 1971)

Walter UllmannPublic welfare and social legislation in the early medieval councils

(presidential address)1–40

Janet L. NelsonNational synods, kingship as office, and royal anointing: an early medieval

syndrome41–60

Margaret GibsonThe case of Berengar of Tours61–8

M. J. WilksEcclesiastica and Regalia: papal investiture policy from the Council of Guastala

to the First Lateran Council, 1106–2369–86

Derek BakerViri religiosi and the York election dispute87–100

Peter LinehanCouncils and synods in thirteenth-century Castile and Aragon101–12

Donald M. NicolThe Byzantine reaction to the Second Council of Lyons, 1274113–46

Brenda BoltonThe Council of London of 1342147–60

Roy M. HainesEducation in English ecclesiastical legislation of the late Middle Ages161–76

Joseph GillThe representation of the universitas fidelium in the councils of the conciliar

period177–98

Margaret HarveyNicholas Ryssheton and the Council of Pisa, 1409197–208

Edith C. TatnallThe condemnation of John Wyclif at the Council of Constance209–18

A. N. E. D. SchofieldSome aspects of English representation at the Council of Basle219–28

A. J. BlackThe Council of Basle and the Second Vatican Council229–34

Basil HallThe colloquies between Catholics and Protestants, 1539–41235–66

W. B. PattersonKing James I’s call for an ecumenical council267–76

Robert PetersJohn Hales and the Synod of Dort277–88

Geoffrey F. NuttallAssembly and association in Dissent, 1689–1831289–310

G. V. BennettThe Convocation of 1710: an Anglican attempt at counter-revolution311–20

Peter HinchliffLaymen in synod: as aspect of the beginnings of synodical government in

South Africa321–8

E. E. Y. HalesThe First Vatican Council329–44

Stuart P. MewsKikuyu and Edinburgh: the interaction of attitudes to two conferences345–59

Studies in Church History vol.8: Popular Belief and Practice, ed. G. J. Cuming and Derek Baker (Cambridge, 1972)

Arnaldo MomiglianoPopular religious beliefs and the late Roman historians1–18

W. H. C. FrendPopular religion and christological controversy in the fifth century19–30

Marjorie ChibnallThe Merovingian monastery of St Evroul in the light of conflicting traditions31–40

Derek BakerVir Dei: secular sanctity in the early tenth century41–54

Colin MorrisA critique of popular religion: Guibert of Nogent on The Relics of the Saints55–60

Denis BethellThe making of a twelfth-century relic collection61–72

Brenda BoltonInnocent III’s treatment of the Humiliati73–82

Alexander MurrayPiety and impiety in thirteenth-century Italy83–106

Marjorie E. ReevesSome popular prophecies from the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries107–34

Rosalind M. T. HillBelief and practice as illustrated by John XXII’s excommunication of Robert

Bruce135–8

Dorothy M. OwenBacon and eggs: Bishop Buckingham and superstition in Lincolnshire139–42

Roy M. Haines‘Wilde wittes and wilfulnes’: John Swetstock’s attack on those

‘poyswunmongeres’, the Lollards143–54

Gordon RuppProtestant spirituality in the first age of the Reformation155–70

Marc L. SchwarzSome thoughts on the development of a lay religious consciousness in pre-Civil-War

England171–8

R. Buick KnoxThe social teaching of Archbishop John Williams179–86

G. S. S. YuleThe puritan piety of members of the Long Parliament187–94

Claire Cross‘He–goats before the Flocks’: a note on the part played by women in the founding

of some Civil War churches195–202

Margaret SpuffordThe social status of some seventeenth-century rural Dissenters203–12

John WalshMethodism and the mob in the eighteenth century213–28

Michael HennellEvangelicalism and worldliness, 1770–1870229–36

W. R. WardThe religion of the people and the problem of control, 1790–1830(presidential

address)237–58

Sheridan GilleyPapists, Protestants and the Irish in London, 1835–70259–66

David M. ThompsonThe churches and society in nineteenth-century England: a rural perspective267–76

A. LatreillePratique, piété et foi populaire dans la France moderne au XIXème siècle277–90

Basil HallThe Welsh revival of 1904–5: a critique291–302

Stuart MewsPuritanism, sport, and race: a symbolic crusade of 1911303–31

Studies in Church History vol.9: Schism, heresy and religious protest, ed. Derek Baker (Cambridge, 1972)

S. L. GreensladeHeresy and schism in the later Roman Empire1–20

R. A. MarkusChristianity and dissent in Roman North Africa: changing perspectivesin recent

Work21–36

W. H. C. FrendHeresy and schism as social and national movements’ (presidential address)37–56

Everett FergusonAttitudes to schism at the Council of Nicaea57–64

Janet L. NelsonSociety, theodicy and the origins of heresy: towards a reassessment of the medieval

Evidence65–78

Brenda BoltonTradition and temerity: papal attitudes to deviants, 1159–121679–92

Derek BakerHeresy and learning in early Cistercianism93–108

Michael WilksReformatio regni: Wyclif and Hus as leaders of religious protest movements109–30

A. K. McHardyBishop Buckingham and the Lollards of the Lincoln diocese131–46

Anne HudsonSome aspects of Lollard book production147–58

Margaret HarveyA sermon by John Luke on the ending of the Great Schism159–70

Joan G. GreatrexThomas Rudborne, monk of Winchester, and the Council of Florence171–6

Walter UllmannJulius II and the schismatic cardinals177–94

Margaret BowkerLincolnshire 1536: heresy, schism or religious discontent?195–212

Felicity HealThe Family of Love and the diocese of Ely213–22

Margaret SpuffordThe quest for the heretical laity in the visitation records of Ely in the late

sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries223–30

Claire Cross‘Dens of loitering lubbers’: Protestant protest against cathedral foundations,

1540–1640231–38

Maurus LunnThe Anglo-Gallicanism of Dom Thomas Preston, 1567–1647239–46

W. B. PattersonHenry IV and the Huguenot appeal for a return to Poissy247–58

K. T. WareOrthodox and Catholics in the seventeenth century: schism or intercommunion?259–76

Gordon DonaldsonThe emergence of schism in seventeenth-century Scotland277–94

Paul SlackReligious protest and urban authority: the case of Henry Sherfield, iconoclast,

1633295–302

W. R. WardSwedenborgianism: heresy, schism or religious protest?303–10

A. R. WinnettAn Irish heretic bishop: Robert Clayton of Clogher311–22

J. M. BarkleyThe Arian schism in Ireland, 1830323–40

Wayne DetzlerProtest and schism in nineteenth-century German Catholicism: the Ronge–Czerski

movement, 1844–5341–50

Keith Hampson‘God and Mammon’: religious protest and educational change in New England

from the Revolution to the Gilded Age351–64

Stuart MewsReason and emotion in working-class religion, 1794–1824365–82

P. G. ScottA. H. Clough: a case study in Victorian doubt383–90

Peter HinchliffAfrican separatists: heresy, schism or protest movement?391–404

Studies in Church History vol.10: Sanctity and secularity, ed. Derek Baker (Oxford, 1973)

Philip SherrardThe desanctification of nature1–20

Kathleen HughesSanctity and secularity in the early Irish church21–38

Janet NelsonRoyal saints and early medieval kingship39–44

Derek Baker‘The surest road to heaven’: ascetic spiritualities in English post-Conquest

religious life45–58

Christopher HoldsworthThe blessings of work: the Cistercian view59–76

Brenda BoltonMulieres sanctae77–98

A. K. McHardyThe representation of the English lower clergy in parliament during the later

fourteenth century97–108

Margaret HarveyPapal witchcraft: the charges against Benedict XIII109–16

Joel T. RosenthalThe fifteenth-century episcopate: careers and bequests117–28

John BossyBlood and baptism: kinship, community and Christianity in western Europe from

the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries 129–44

Geoffrey F. NuttallOvercoming the world: the early Quaker programme (presidential address)145–64

R. Buick KnoxBishop John Hacket and his teaching on sanctity and secularity165–72

J. van den BergOrthodoxy, rationalism and the world in eighteenth-century Holland173–92

Haddon Willmer‘Holy worldliness’ in nineteenth-century England193–212

Patrick ScottThe business of belief: the emergence of ‘religious’ publishing213–24

Studies in Church History vol.11: The materials, sources and methods of ecclesiastical history, ed. Derek Baker (Oxford, 1975)

R. A. MarkusChurch history and the early church historians1–17

William FrendRecently discovered materials for writing the history of Christian Nubia19–30

Rosamond PierceThe ‘Frankish’ penitentials31–9

Janet L. NelsonRitual and reality in the early medieval ordines41–51

Diana GreenwayEcclesiastical chronology: fasti 1066–130053–60

Mary CheneyThe council of Westminster 1175: new light on an old source61–8

Michael RichterA socio-linguistic approach to the Latin Middle Ages69–82

Derek BakerScissors and paste: Corpus Christi, Cambridge, MS 139 again83–123

Brenda BoltonSources for the early history of the Humiliati125–33

Rosalind M. T. HillUncovenanted blessings of ecclesiastical records (presidential address)135–46

Michael WilksMisleading manuscripts: Wyclif and the non-wycliffite Bible147–61

Diana WoodMaximus sermocinator verbi Dei: the sermon literature of Pope Clement VI163–72

Roy M. HainesThe compilation of a late fourteenth-century precedent book –Register Brian 2173–85

Margaret HarveyThe letters of the University of Oxford on withdrawal of obedience from Pope

Boniface IX187–98

Dorothy OwenEcclesiastical jurisdiction 1300 to 1550: the records and their interpretation199–221

Steven RuncimanThe Greek church under the Turks; problems of research223–35

W. D. J. Cargill ThompsonJohn Strype as a source for the study of sixteenth-century English church history237–47

W. B. PattersonThe recusant view of the English past249–62

David J. KeepTheology as a basis for policy in the Elizabethan church263–8

Claire CrossPopular piety and the records of the unestablished churches 1460–1660269–92

Nigel YatesWelsh church history: sources and problems293–300

Robert DunningNineteenth-century parochial sources301–8

Sheridan GilleySupernaturalised culture: Catholic attitudes and Latin lands309–23

Patrick ScottVictorian religious periodicals: fragments that remain325–39

Martin BrechtThe significance of territorial church history for church history in general341–53

Keith RobbinsInstitutions and illusions: the dilemma of the modern ecclesiastical historian355–65

Studies in Church Historyvol. 12: Church, Society and Politics, ed. Derek Baker (Oxford, 1975)

Christopher BrookeDavid Knowlesix–xii

Geoffrey de Ste CroixEarly Christian attitudes to property and slavery1–38

Rosalind M. T. HillHoly kings: the bane of seventh-century society39–43

Bernard MeehanOutsiders, insiders and property at Durham around 110045–58

Derek BakerLegend and reality: the case of Waldef of Melrose59–82

Brenda BoltonFulk of Toulouse: the escape that failed83–93

Colin MorrisJudicium Dei: the social and political significance of the ordeal in the eleventh

century95–111

Beryl SmalleyEcclesiastical attitudes to novelty c.1100–c.1250113–31

A. K. McHardyThe alien priories and the expulsion of aliens from England in 1378133–41

Roy M. HainesChurch, society and politics in the early fifteenth century as viewed from an

English pulpit143–57

W. D. J. Cargill ThompsonLuther and the right of resistance to the emperor159–202

Robert M. KingdomWas the Protestant Reformation a revolution?The case of Geneva203–22

W. B. PattersonJean de Serres and the politics of religious pacification 1594–8223–44

Julia BuckroydThe resolutioners and the Scottish nobility in the early months of 1660245–52

John McMannersJansenism and politics in the eighteenth century253–73

Henry D. Rack‘Christ’s kingdom is not of this world’: the case of Benjamin Hoadly versus

William Law reconsidered275–91

A. F. WallsA colonial concordat: two views of Christianity and civilisation293–302

Basil HallAlessandro Gavazzi: a Barnabite friar and the Risorgimento (presidential

address)303–56

Brian TaylorChurch and state in Borneo: the Anglican bishopric357–68

D. W. BebbingtonGladstone and the Nonconformists: a religious affinity in politics369–82

David M. ThompsonThe politics of the Enabling Act (1919)383–92

John M. BarkleyThe Presbyterian Church in Ireland and the Government of Ireland Act (1920)393–403

Owen Geoffrey ReesThe Barmen Declaration (May 1934)405–17

Keith RobbinsChurch and politics: Dorothy Buxton and the German church struggle419–33

Studies in Church History vol.13: The Orthodox Churches and the West, ed. Derek Baker (Oxford, 1976)

Peter BrownEastern and western Christendom in late antiquity: a parting of the ways1–24

E. Amand de MendietaThe official attitude of Basil of Caesarea as a Christian bishop towards Greek

philosophy and science25–49

Averil CameronThe early religious policy of Justin II51–67

W. H. C. FrendEastern attitudes to Rome during the Accacian schism69–81

Derek BakerTheodore of Sykeon and the historians83–96

Janet L. NelsonSymbols in context: rulers’ inauguration rituals in Byzantium and the West in

the early Middle Ages97–119

Joan M. PetersenDid Gregory the Great know Greek?121–34

Rosalind M. T. HillPure air and portentous heresy135–40

Donald M. NicolThe papal scandal (presidential address)141–68

Brenda M. BoltonA mission to the Orthodox: Cistercians in the Latin empire

[p. 169 gives sub-title as: ‘the Cistercians in Romania’]169–81

Deno J. GeanakoplosBonaventura, the two mendicant orders and the Greeks at the Council of Lyons183–211

Kathryn HillRobert Grosseteste and his work of Greek translation213–22

Muriel HeppellNew light on the visit of Grigori Tsamblak to the Council of Constance223–9

G. J. CumingEastern liturgies and Anglican divines 1510–1662231–8

Henry R. SeftonThe Scottish bishops and Archbishop Arsenius239–46

Kallistos WareThe fifth earl of Guilford (1766–1827) and his secret conversion to the Orthodox

Church247–56

Richard CloggAnticlericalism in pre-independence Greece c 1750–1821257–76

E. D. TappeThe Rumanian Orthodox Church and the West277–91

Stuart P. MewsAnglican intervention in the election of an Orthodox patriarch, 1925–6293–306

Nicolas ZernovThe significance of the Russian Orthodox diaspora and its effect on the Christian

West307–27

Studies in Church History vol.14: Renaissance and Renewal in Christian History, ed. Derek Baker (Oxford, 1977)

Gerald BonnerVera lux illa est quae illuminate: the Christian humanism of Augustine1–22

D. A. BulloughRoman books and Carolingian renovation23–50

Janet L. NelsonOn the limits of the Carolingian Renaissance51–69

Marilyn DunnEvangelism or repentance?The re–Christianisation of the Pelopponese in the

ninth and tenth centuries71–86

R. I. MooreSome heretical attitudes to the renewal of the church87–93

Brenda BoltonPaupertas Christi: old wealth and new poverty in the twelfth century95–103

Bernard HamiltonRebuilding Zion: the holy places of Jerusalem in the twelfth century105–16

P. G. WalshAlan of Lille as a renaissance figure117–35

Michael WilksAlan of Lille and the new man137–57

Duncan NimmoReform at the Council of Constance: the Franciscan case159–73

W. B. PattersonThe idea of renewal in Girolamo Aleander’s conciliar thought175–86

Joan G. GreatrexHumanistic script in a monastic register: an outward and visible sign?187–91

Derek BakerOld wine in new bottles: attitudes to reform in pre-Reformation England193–211

Robert DunningRevival at Glastonbury 1530–9213–22

Patrick Collinson‘A magazine of religious patterns’: an Erasmian topic transposed in English

Protestantism223–49

J. K. CameronThe Renaissance tradition in the Reformed Church: the example of Scotland

(presidential address)251–69

F. Donald LoganThe origins of the so-called regius professorships: an aspect of the Renaissance

in Oxford and Cambridge271–8

Anthony FletcherConcern for renewal in the root and branch debates of 1641279–86

Eamon DuffyPrimitive Christianity revived: religious renewal in Augustan England287–300

Doreen M. Rosman‘What has Christ to do with Apollo?’Evangelicalism and the novel 1800–30301–11

Sheridan GilleyJohn Lingard and the Catholic revival313–27

Gavin WhiteNew names for old things: Scottish reaction to early Tractarianism329–37

John M. BarkleyThe renaissance of public worship in the Church of Scotland 1865–1905339–50