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From Eamon Duffy:
The creation of the Public Record Office in 1838 made accessible thousands of
documents from Tudor England, but didn’t radically alter this traditional
spin on the Reformation story. The greatest Victorian historian of Tudor
England was James Anthony Froude, who eagerly explored the archives, but
read them through inherited spectacles. A Protestant to his fingertips, he
hated clergy, doctrine, religious mystery and, above all, Catholicism. He
saw the break with Rome as the beginning of Britain’s rise to imperial
greatness, and the Reformation as a confrontation between two incompatible
civilisations. Froude knew that the Reformation had been imposed to begin
with on a reluctant nation, but he rejoiced that this had happened.
A disciple of Thomas Carlyle, he thought history was not for the little
people, but was made by heroes. “Up to the defeat of the Armada,” he wrote,
“manhood suffrage in England would at any moment have brought back the
Pope.” Happily, there was no democracy in Tudor England, and the country had
been saved from itself by the tyrannical Henry VIII, and if the abbeys were
unroofed, and a few hundred priests butchered in the process, that was a
small price for imperial greatness and the march of progress. Shorn of its
more blatant jingoistic rhetoric, Froude’s Protestant version of the
Reformation would be recycled in the writing of academic history late into
the 20th century.
Historians no longer take that venerable Protestant version for granted, but
it is still alive and well in the wider culture. It underpins, for example,
Shekhar Kapur’s biopic Elizabeth. It was reiterated recently by the
journalist Simon Jenkins when he wrote that “most Britons had, by the late
15th century, come to regard the Roman church as an alien, corrupt and
reactionary agent of intellectual oppression, awash in magic and
superstition. They could not wait to see the back of it.” (Read entire article.)
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1 comment:
Thus why Henry Cardinal Newman said to be deep in history is to cease being Protestant.
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