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  • Back MatterSource: The Sixteenth Century Journal, Vol. 25, No. 4 (Winter, 1994), pp. 1068-1072Published by: The Sixteenth Century JournalStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2542365 .Accessed: 17/06/2014 03:40

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  • 1068 Sixteenth Century Journal XXV / 4 (1994)

    From Renaissance NMonarc + to AbsofMte MonarcdI~

    French Kings, Nobles, and Estates

    +?? 2 | iJ. RUSSELL MAJOR Scholars of early modern France have traditionally seen an

    alliance between the kings and the bourgeoisie leading to an absolute, centralized monarchy, perhaps as early as the reign of Francis I (1515-47). J. Russell Major draws on forty-five years of research to dispute this view, offering both a masterful synthesis of existing scholarship and a fresh interpretation of the complex

    chain of events that set the stage for the politics of the French Revolution.

    $49.95 hardcover

    Law anb Citizensbip +Mn EavrL Mobern France

    CHARLOTTE C. WELLS

    Scholars of French history have long maintained that the modern French notion of citizenship-including the concept that ip

    citizenship endows one with certain civil rights-is a product of the Enlightenment. Charlotte Wells argues that many of the

    ideas that found their way into Enlightenment tracts in fact had +v This is their roots in the French Renaissance.

    "This is 'cutting-edge' scholarship. ... of the highest quality." -Orest Ranum, The Johns Hopkins University

    $37.50 hardcover

    THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY PRESS Hampden Station, Baltimore, Maryland 21211

    +sj~iij~~ ~ ~~To order, call 1-800-537-5487.

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  • Sixteen Cntry ournal XXV /4 (1994) 1069

    THEJEws IN THE HISTORY OF THE WAR OF ENGLAND, 1485-1850THE FISS | DAVID S. KAZ, Td-A n ilr Cuh and

    ==-

    D-aid S. Kaz e une l topcs PulcV nm in such as the Jewish advocates of Henry I Ra e VIis divorce and the Jewish conspirators Venice of Elizabethan England, as well as con- ROBERT C. DAVIS tributing to continuing debate on sbjectsObio Sts Uinivri such as the role of Jewish finance and the Fascinating and well emergence ofAnglo-Jewish insitutions. writtn-This book can .. 1994 472pp.; 16plates $62.00 be read as an axcting xmple of the new

    ssocialculral hisn a stmulang mto- HUNrERS AND POACHERS type ofmichisyor simply a in tgu- AH Soia

    T 1 ?~ Ding read on dthe complex and sill suirprisily A nSocla i Id CalWi storoIunknown word of veray ife in the r Unlwful Hunting n E andmodern period.' -Guido Ruggiero, 1485-1640 i Cof a

    ROGERB. MANNING 1994 240pp; i$l pp3$1&95 doh 39.95 Cevend State University CATH P 'Breaks significantly new ground...The THE CAHOLC PRESTHOOD material, much of it archival, that he AND THE ENGLSH (Manning) has so meticulously sifted REFORMATION through radically alters our social and his- PETER MARSHALL torica understnding not only of legal and Ampfrt Coleg illegal hunting in the period, but of a num- Using a wide range of contemporary ber of major literary texts." -New York sources, Peter Marshall demonstrates how Review ofBoak the practical consequences of the 1993 280 pp.; 8 pp ptes, 2 maps $45.00 Reformation undermined the fragile mods viendi that had sustained the lte HENRY'S WARS AND medieval system. SHAKESPEARE'S LAWS (OxortridMoS )

    fives on the I - , R

  • 1070 Sixteenth Ctury Journal XXV / 4 (1994)

    Giambologna

    Gibbons s s seeks to broaden our hitherto limited view of Giambologna's work by considering his neglected Genoese masterpiece, the erimalei Chapel. CaG m cuta l to Hotey eo,,r,. $0.00 cloth, it ted

    Mapping the Renaissane m World Te Geographicall lagiation in tbc gc of Disc~ry FRANK LESTRINGANT Tmdazd by Dvid Fmmu Forewd by Sty h G mMau Focusing on the great traveller and map maker, Andr- Thevet, Lestringant examines

    GLambdo . Xthe audacity of the cosmographer who rivaled UnivcrsitL Genoa. Photagrap by Ahtonio God in the creation of new worlds. Quattrone. Te New? Hitoriw' r d Studim in Culural Poeti, $38.00

    cloth, illustrated

    Orphans of Petrarch Poetry and Theory in te Spant6 Renaimanrc IGNACIO NAVARRETE 'A much needed historical renovation of the entire period.... An impressive contribution to our understanding of both the poetry and the cultural history of the epoch."

    -Edward Dudley, SUNY, Buffalo $40.00 cloth

    Printing, Propaganda, and Martin Luther MARK U. EDWARDS, JR. 'One of the most important works ever written on the reception of Luther through print"--Thomas Brady, UC, Berkeley $4o.oo00 dloth, i.ilu

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  • Sixtenth Century ourna XXV / 4(1994) 1071

    Lo1uis XI Conquerors and Frederic J Conqered in

    ^Bauzgarnher Medieal Wales and x Terie rfcg o alphA.

    Grifiths Louis Xd(149&- Ralph Griffiths examines the period

    Egnite1515) has been from the last decades of the much ne-gected eleventh century to the mid-six- by histians teenth century in Wales. These es-

    tWhil not n the not says iuminate the political and front rank of conflt ict behween Welsh French monarchs, Louis XI, The communities and Norman and Father of the People, remains an English forces. The book draws on ineresting and apal figure, eidence that explai resis- and the events s rgn were tance movements against Edward I higy signiant to the future of the and Edward and the rbellion of French state. This is a lucid, highly Owain Glyn Dwr against Hermy IV. readable account of a fascinating 2pp Sa period in French history. U ll asecsd

    Women in England Sixteenth-Century Europe 1500-1760 Eansion and Conflict A Social History Richard Mackenney Anne Laurence Few hundred-year periods have This book charts the expecttions held the imagxiation as much as and expeiences of women in60 s study examines the England in the period between the Po of expansiontpopula- Reformation and the Industrial tion wth adventue overseas Revolution, using the most recent new voyages of the imagnation- statistical studies as well as the as well as the areas of conflict-the evidence of individual biographies world and the spirit public and and other writings. Anne Laurence privatespheres, ete and popular examines all aspects of women's l argue that spitual lives both inside and outside of the and itellectual curiosity had the home. same cultural roots. home.

    W $SU Cd MaG $ism pL

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  • 1072 Sixteenth Century Journal XXV / 4 (1994)

    "These essays demonstrate again .-hx Heiko Oberman is the leading student of the Reformation in his generation. and not only in Ameria. Like all his scholarship. they reflect his unique combination of detailed knowx ledge. broad interests. and a capacit\ for stimulating generalization." -_ illiam J. BouH'sma "A wxelcome addition to Reformation studies. .... E\verv here "ve hear Oberman's distintive voice - erudite. pungent. playful. and pithy. striving to capture a truth for our times in the forgotten. suppressed. or repressed thoughts of b ygone centunies."

    -H. C. Erik Midelfort

    "This new collection is vintage Oberman..... All of these studies. xritten oxvr s;pan of nearly thirn' earsf. are marked b. Oberman's unique l a. of Ixlooking at familiar things and ideas and. even more. bv his inimitable xx ay of expressing his xvies."

    - Thomas A. Brady. Jr. ISBN 0-SOS-0--3I-l. Paper. S19.99

    At vour bookstore. or call S()-253--521 FAX 616-459-65

    IIBWM . EERDMANS PUBLISHING CO. 1I ; 255 JEFFERSON AVE. S.E. GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN 49503

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  • "The best anthology of the Reformed tradition that I have seen. It will be useful for students of church history and church polity and beneficial to officers and leaders in local churches.... A must for any church or seminary library"

    --W. JACK WILLIAMSON

    "Convenient, encyclopedic, and readable, Paradigms in Polity is easily the best anthology of its sort. A highly valuable resource."

    -- MICHAEL BAUMAN

    "Fills an important lacuna in the pastor's library.... As is so often the case, the best foundation for serious thinking about any church issue is a mastery of the church's past thought and practice. Paradigms in Polity is exactly suited to help us lay that foundation." -ROBERT S. RAYBURN

    "Provides the historical perspective necessary to avoid the parti- sanship, pragmatism, and tyrannic urgency that so frequently becloud contemporary discussions of ecclesiology"

    FAX~ A~--T. DAVID GORDON

    rl c f| .|...... .... .....:

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  • Humanism in Zurich Sources from the 15th and 16th centuries

    on microfiche Editor: Fritz Biisser, Zurich University

    4..a

    This collection offers a representative cross-section of the complex world of European humanism. Whether we are dealing with editions of classical authors, or with the contributions of Renaissance writers, our aim is to show, with the assistance of the original texts from the time in question, what philosophers, philologists, rhetors and poets, jurists, historians, natural scientists and physicians taught and published under the influence of the so-called "studia humanitatis", as well as, in several cases, what they contributed to state, church and society through their participation in public life.

    The collection will contain more than 1100 works (opera omnia, individual works, editions of classical works) by 46 authors from various countries.

    The project will be made available in installments.

    Available now (November 1994): 2 installments 152 titles on 731 microfiche Price: 5,754 Dutch guilders

    Subscription price: c. 2500 Dutch guilders /installment

    Catalogues available free.on request.

    !IDC Microform Publishers

    IDC by, P.O. Box 11205, 2301 EE Leiden, The Netherlands Fax 31-71-13 17 21 Dealer in the USA:

    Norman Ross Publishing Inc., 330 West 58th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 or call toll-free 800 648-8850

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    Article Contentsp. 1068p. 1069p. 1070p. 1071p. 1072[unnumbered][unnumbered]

    Issue Table of ContentsThe Sixteenth Century Journal, Vol. 25, No. 4 (Winter, 1994), pp. 787-1072Volume Information [pp. ]Front Matter [pp. ]In Widow's Habit: Women between Convent and Family in Sixteenth-Century Milan [pp. 787-807]The Politics of Conversion: John Calvin and the Bishop of Troyes [pp. 809-822]Provincial Governors and Their Regimes during the French Wars of Religion: The Duc de Guise and the City Council of Chlons-sur-Marne[pp. 823-840]Securing the Reformation Through Education: The Duke's Scholarship System of Sixteenth-Century Wurttemberg [pp. 841-851]Printers, Patrons, Readers, and Spies: Importation of French Propaganda in Late Elizabethan England [pp. 853-872]Clandestine Marriage and Amadis de Gaule: The Text, the World, and the Reader [pp. 873-886]A House Divided: Spain, Austria, and the Bohemian and Hungarian Successions [pp. 887-903]Book Notices [pp. 904-905]Book ReviewsReview: untitled [pp. 906-907]

    Errata: Book Reviews [pp. 906]Book ReviewsReview: untitled [pp. 908-909]Review: untitled [pp. 909-910]Review: untitled [pp. 910-911]Review: untitled [pp. 912-913]Review: untitled [pp. 913-914]Review: untitled [pp. 914-915]Review: untitled [pp. 916-917]Review: untitled [pp. 917-918]Review: untitled [pp. 918-919]Review: untitled [pp. 919-920]Review: untitled [pp. 921-922]Review: untitled [pp. 922-924]Review: untitled [pp. 924-925]Review: untitled [pp. 925-926]Review: untitled [pp. 926-927]Review: untitled [pp. 928-929]Review: untitled [pp. 929-931]Review: untitled [pp. 931-932]Review: untitled [pp. 932-933]Review: untitled [pp. 933-934]Review: untitled [pp. 934-935]Review: untitled [pp. 936-937]Review: untitled [pp. 937-939]Review: untitled [pp. 939-940]Review: untitled [pp. 940-941]Review: untitled [pp. 942-943]Review: untitled [pp. 943-944]Review: untitled [pp. 944-945]Review: untitled [pp. 945-946]Review: untitled [pp. 946-948]Review: untitled [pp. 948-949]Review: untitled [pp. 949-950]Review: untitled [pp. 951-952]Review: untitled [pp. 952-953]Review: untitled [pp. 953-954]Review: untitled [pp. 954-956]Review: untitled [pp. 956-957]Review: untitled [pp. 957-958]Review: untitled [pp. 958-959]Review: untitled [pp. 959-960]Review: untitled [pp. 961-962]Review: untitled [pp. 962-963]Review: untitled [pp. 963-964]Review: untitled [pp. 964-965]Review: untitled [pp. 965-966]Review: untitled [pp. 967]Review: untitled [pp. 968-969]Review: untitled [pp. 969-970]Review: untitled [pp. 971-972]Review: untitled [pp. 972-973]Review: untitled [pp. 973-974]Review: untitled [pp. 974-975]Review: untitled [pp. 976-977]Review: untitled [pp. 977-978]Review: untitled [pp. 978-979]Review: untitled [pp. 979-981]Review: untitled [pp. 981-982]Review: untitled [pp. 983]Review: untitled [pp. 983-984]Review: untitled [pp. 985-986]Review: untitled [pp. 986-987]Review: untitled [pp. 988-989]Review: untitled [pp. 989-990]Review: untitled [pp. 990-991]Review: untitled [pp. 991-992]Review: untitled [pp. 992-994]Review: untitled [pp. 994-995]Review: untitled [pp. 995-996]Review: untitled [pp. 996-998]Review: untitled [pp. 998-999]Review: untitled [pp. 999-1003]Review: untitled [pp. 1003-1004]Review: untitled [pp. 1004-1005]Review: untitled [pp. 1005-1006]Review: untitled [pp. 1007-1008]Review: untitled [pp. 1008-1009]Review: untitled [pp. 1009-1010]Review: untitled [pp. 1010-1012]Review: untitled [pp. 1012-1013]Review: untitled [pp. 1013]Review: untitled [pp. 1014-1015]Review: untitled [pp. 1015-1016]Review: untitled [pp. 1016-1019]Review: untitled [pp. 1019-1020]Review: untitled [pp. 1020-1021]Review: untitled [pp. 1022-1023]Review: untitled [pp. 1023-1024]Review: untitled [pp. 1024-1025]Review: untitled [pp. 1025-1028]Review: untitled [pp. 1028-1029]Review: untitled [pp. 1029-1031]Review: untitled [pp. 1031-1032]Review: untitled [pp. 1032]Review: untitled [pp. 1033-1034]Review: untitled [pp. 1034-1036]Review: untitled [pp. 1036-1037]Review: untitled [pp. 1037-1039]Review: untitled [pp. 1039-1040]Review: untitled [pp. 1040-1041]Review: untitled [pp. 1041-1042]

    Back Matter [pp. ]


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