Eamon Duffy | |
---|---|
Born | Dundalk, Ireland | 9 February 1947
Nationality | Irish |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | |
Doctoral advisor | |
Academic work | |
Discipline | History |
Sub-discipline | History of Christianity |
Institutions | Magdalene College,Cambridge |
Doctoral students | Paul C. H. Lim |
Notable works | The Stripping of the Altars (1992) |
Eamon Duffy FSA FBA KSG (born 1947) is an Irish historian. He is the Emeritus Professor of the History of Christianity at the University of Cambridge,and a Fellow and former president of Magdalene College. [1]
Duffy was born on 9 February 1947,[ citation needed ] in Dundalk,Ireland. [2] He describes himself as a "cradle Catholic". [2] He was educated at St Philip's School and the University of Hull. He undertook postgraduate research at the University of Cambridge,where his doctoral advisers were Owen Chadwick and Gordon Rupp. [3]
Duffy specialises in 15th- to 17th-century religious history of Britain. He is also a former member of the Pontifical Historical Commission. [4] His work has done much to overturn the popular image of late-medieval Catholicism in England as moribund,and instead presents it as a vibrant cultural force.[ citation needed ] On weekdays from 22 October to 2 November 2007,he presented the BBC Radio 4 series 10 Popes Who Shook the World [5] –those popes featured were Peter,Leo I,Gregory I,Gregory VII,Innocent III,Paul III,Pius IX,Pius XII,John XXIII,and John Paul II.
Duffy moved to Magdalene College in the University of Cambridge in 1979,and was professor of the history of Christianity from 2003 to 2014. Since 2014 he has been Emeritus Professor. [6] In 2004 he was elected as a Fellow of the British Academy. [7]
John Fisher was an English Catholic bishop, cardinal, and theologian. Fisher was also an academic and Chancellor of the University of Cambridge. He is honoured as a martyr and saint by the Catholic Church.
Reginald Pole was an English cardinal and the last Catholic archbishop of Canterbury, holding the office from 1556 to 1558, during the Counter-Reformation.
Magdalene College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge. The college was founded in 1428 as a Benedictine hostel, in time coming to be known as Buckingham College, before being refounded in 1542 as the College of St Mary Magdalene.
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Christopher Haigh is a British historian specialising in religion and politics around the English Reformation. Until his retirement in 2009, he was Student and Tutor in Modern History at Christ Church, Oxford and University Lecturer at Oxford University. He was educated at Churchill College, Cambridge and the University of Manchester. Haigh was a very influential revisionist in Tudor historiography and on the English Reformation. Haigh's writings mostly demonstrated that, contrary to orthodox understandings of the English Reformation, religious reform was extremely complex and varied considerably at a parish level. Haigh has also been noted for his work in diminishing the significance attributed to anticlericalism prior to 1530. His revisionism formed part of a broader wave in Tudor historiography with other historians such as Eamon Duffy.
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Alexandra Marie Walsham is an English-Australian academic historian. She specialises in early modern Britain and in the impact of the Protestant and Catholic reformations. Since 2010, she has been Professor of Modern History at the University of Cambridge and is currently a fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. She is co-editor of Past & Present and vice-president of the Royal Historical Society.
Felicity Margaret Heal, is a British historian and academic, specialising in early modern Britain. From 1980 to 2011, she was a lecturer at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford. She had previously taught or researched at Newnham College, Cambridge, the Open University, and the University of Sussex.
Peter Marshall is a Scottish historian and academic, known for his work on the Reformation and its impact on the British Isles and Europe. He is Professor of History at the University of Warwick.
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