Abstract
This article seeks to present post-Reformation priestly missions in England as a practice rooted in a maritime structure of seaports, sea routes, and mariners. While historiography has traced the networks that brought priests to England in the second half of the sixteenth century, it has not focused exclusively on their maritime dimension. As a result, the role of sea conveyors in assisting travelling priests has been largely overlooked, leaving an incomplete picture. By examining landing sites, methods of conveyance, and the mariners involved, this article aims to address that gap. It also offers additional analysis to support the conclusions of scholars such as John Bossy, Alan Dures, and Michael Williams.
Funding source: The British Academy
Award Identifier / Grant number: RaRFe\100059
Acknowledgements
I am deeply grateful to Dr Jane Stevenson, Dr Peter Davidson and Dr N. A. M. Rodger for their insightful comments, suggestions, and assistance with references. I also wish to thank the anonymous reviewers for their valuable feedback, and Dr Lucy Wooding and, once again, Dr N. A. M. Rodger for making this research opportunity possible.
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Research funding: This work was supported by the British Academy (RaRFe\100059).
© 2025 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- Religious Women and Liturgy in a Fifteenth-Century Portuguese Codex: Gendering the Reception and Profession Ceremonies in the Dominican Convents
- Memory and the Cloister: Mapping the Architecture of Observant Franciscan Identity in Brescia, 1422–1610
- La Babilonyke Meretrice Romaine: Roots and Character of Guillaume Postel’s Anti-Papalism
- Translating Women’s Silence: Erasmus’ Translation and Paraphrase of 1Corinthians 14:34–35
- Maritime Networks: Priests, Mariners, and Their Landing Places in Elizabethan and Early Stuart England
- “The Precious Gifts of Faith, Repentance, and the Feare of God”: Court Confessions and Emotions in Old and New England Witch Trials (ca. 1560–1692)
- Pascal’s Wafer: The Concept of Piety in Blaise Pascal’s Theological Anthropology
- Dossier: Text, Textile, and Theology 1
- Making the Bible a Fashion Accessory in Seventeenth-Century England: Materiality, Market, and the Present-Tense Protestantism of Embroidered Book Covers
- “And I Shall Give to Thee the Crown of Life”: The Utstein Antependium and the Visual Religious Culture in Early Modern Norway (ca. 1680–1700)
- Les ornements liturgiques des Carmes dans les anciens Pays-Bas du XVIIe siècle: un outil au service de leurs thèses