-
1
Joseph Addison en voyage : quelques remarques sur la France ou la mise en intrigue de l’identité anglaise
Published 2015-07-01“…Here, by way of contrastive rhetoric, Addison questions the notion of English liberty, inherited form the Glorious Revolution of 1688.…”
Get full text
Article -
2
Purging the Past and Gauging the Future: Stage Puritans as Manifestations of Religious Trauma in Restoration Comedies Adapted from European Sources (1660-1689)
Published 2024-12-01“…This paper focuses on five Restoration comedies with religious concerns composed between Charles II’s return to England and the Glorious Revolution, and adapted from French, Spanish and English (Elizabethan and Jacobean) sources: The Law Against Lovers (1663) by William Davenant, Tartuffe or the French Puritan (1670) by Matthew Medbourne, Sir Patient Fancy (1678) by Aphra Behn, The Spanish Fryar, or the Double-Discovery (1681) by John Dryden, and Sir Courtly Nice, or It Cannot Be (1685) by John Crowne. …”
Get full text
Article -
3
Edward Stillingfleet and the 17th Century Episcopacy
Published 2022-06-01“…If individual Churches or ministers stayed true to accepted practices and beliefs, there would have been less need for the Episcopacy. After the Glorious Revolution in 1689, Stillingfleet became the Bishop of Worcester. …”
Get full text
Article