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Tables of Contents for Persecution and Toleration in Protestant England 1588-1689
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
List of tables
ix
 
Preface
xi
 
Introduction
1
20
The Whig history of toleration
1
2
The revisionist reactiton
3
2
A post-revisionist approach
5
2
Relating past and present
7
3
The concept of toleration
10
4
Aspects of the history of toleration
14
7
The Protestant Theory of Persecution
21
26
The rise of persecution
21
3
The intolerance of the Church of England
24
6
The theology of persecution
30
8
The politics of persecution
38
9
The Protestant Theory of Toleration
47
31
The European tolerationist tradition
51
2
The varieties of tolerationism
53
5
Theological and philosophical arguments
58
10
Political and economic arguments
68
10
Elizabeth I and Protestant Uniformity, 1558-1603
78
32
Persecution in England before 1558
78
3
Elizabeth
81
4
Catholics
85
8
The Puritan movement
93
3
Separatists
96
3
Anabaptists and Arians
99
3
A persecuting state
102
8
The Early Stuarts, 1603-40
110
24
James I and English Protestantism
111
6
James I and English Catholicism
117
4
Charles I and the Popish Plot
121
4
Laudianism and the attack on Puritanism
125
9
The Puritan Revolutiton, 1640-60
134
32
Godly warriors
135
8
The fragmentatiton of Puritanism
143
2
The toleration debate
145
2
The enigma of Oliver Cromwell
147
2
Ranters and Socinians
149
2
The Quakers
151
4
The Readmission of the Jews
155
2
The fortunes of Catholics
157
1
The survival of Anglicanism
158
1
The impact of the Puritan Revolution
159
7
The Restoration, 1660-88
166
31
The Restoration and the `Clarendon' Code
166
3
The persecution of Dissent
169
10
Towards an open society?
179
3
Catholics and the `Popish Plot'
182
5
Catholicism and toleration under James II, 1685-8
187
10
1689 and the Rise of Toleration
197
28
1689 and after
198
8
The tolerationist legacy
206
2
Explaining the rise of toleration
208
17
Glossary
225
3
Select Bibliography
228
6
Index
234