All Stories

  1. Preaching the “Long Reformation” in the English Revolution
  2. Shakespeare’s Money. How much did he make and what did this mean?
  3. ‘Gender Trouble’
  4. A Moderate Puritan Preacher Negotiates Religious Change
  5. Gerrard Winstanley, News Culture, and Law Reform in the Early 1650s
  6. Society and the Roles of Women
  7. Milton, Areopagitica, and the Parliamentary Cause
  8. The Complete Works of Gerrard Winstanley, Vol. 1
  9. The Complete Works of Gerrard Winstanley, Vol. 2
  10. Manuscripts Associated with Winstanley
  11. Writings by Winstanley appearing in Other Publications
  12. Fire in the Bush
  13. Puritanism and gender
  14. Thomas Edwards's Gangraena and heresiological traditions
  15. Gangraena and the Struggle for the English Revolution
  16. Gangraena as Heresiography
  17. Introduction Approaches to Thomas Edwards's Gangraena
  18. Edwards, Gangraena, and Presbyterian Mobilization
  19. ‘Like a Universal Leprosie Overspread this Whole Kingdom’ City and Provinces in Gangraena
  20. ‘Books Lately Printed’ Gangraena and the World of Print
  21. Early Quakerism: A historian's afterword
  22. Religion and Society in Stratford Upon Avon, 1619-1638
  23. Politics, Society and Civil War in Warwickshire, 1620–1660
  24. The social context
  25. Public affairs 1620–1639
  26. Military rule 1642–1649
  27. The impact of the Civil War
  28. Politics and religion 1649–1662
  29. Local governors 1620–1660
  30. Active county committeemen 1643–1647
  31. Bibliography of manuscript and printed sources
  32. Peers and gentlemen before the Civil War
  33. The coming of the Civil War 1639–1642
  34. Militancy and localism in Warwickshire politics 1643–1649
  35. Thomas Dugard and His Circle in the 1630s – a ‘Parliamentary–Puritan’ Connexion?
  36. The King, the Parliament, and the Localities during the English Civil War
  37. WARWICKSHIRE ON THE EVE OF THE CIVIL WAR: A ‘COUNTY COMMUNITY’?
  38. An Appeal to All Englishmen
  39. Letter to Lady Eleanor Douglas
  40. A New-years Gift for the Parliament and Army
  41. A Letter Taken at Wellingborough
  42. To the Council of State
  43. Manuscript Letters, December 1649
  44. V. The New Law of Righteousness
  45. A Declaration from the Poor Oppressed People of England
  46. A Declaration to the Powers of England
  47. Gender, Exile and The Hague Courts of Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia and Mary, Princess of Orange in the 1650s
  48. “Popular” Presbyterianism in the 1640s and 1650s
  49. Diggers, True Levellers and the Crisis of the English Revolution