Christie-Miller, Ian. 72 in His Name. Reuchlin, Luther, Thenaud, Wolff, and the Names of Seventy-Two Angels.
Article | Contributor(s): François Roudaut
Christ-von Wedel, Christine. Erasmus of Rotterdam: A Portrait.
Article | Contributor(s): Nathan Ron
Cole, Michael W. Sofonisba’s Lesson: A Renaissance Artist and Her Work.
Article | Contributor(s): Leslie Korrick
Crankshaw, David, and George Gross, eds. Reformation Reputations: The Power of the Individual in English Reformation History.
Article | Contributor(s): Mary Morrissey
Cranston, Jodi. Green Worlds of Renaissance Venice.
Article | Contributor(s): Chriscinda Henry
Cussen, Bryan. Pope Paul III and the Cultural Politics of Reform, 1534–1549.
Article | Contributor(s): John M. Hunt
Dzelzainis, Martin, and Edward Holberton, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Andrew Marvell.
Article | Contributor(s): Willis Goth Regier
Geddes, Leslie A. Watermarks: Leonardo da Vinci and the Mastery of Nature.
Article | Contributor(s): Francesca Fiorani
Herzig, Tamar. A Convert’s Tale: Art, Crime, and Jewish Apostasy in Renaissance Italy.
Article | Contributor(s): Nilab Ferozan
Jones-Davies, Margaret et Florence Malhomme, éds. Éloquence et action à la Renaissance.
Article | Contributor(s): Estelle Doudet
Laguna, Ana Maria, and John Beusterien, eds. Goodbye Eros: Recasting Forms and Norms of Love in the Age of Cervantes.
Article | Contributor(s): Sherry Velasco
Mazzonis, Querciolo. Riforme di vita cristiana nel Cinquecento italiano.
Article | Contributor(s): James W. Nelson Novoa
McClure, Ellen. The Logic of Idolatry in Seventeenth-Century French Literature.
Article | Contributor(s): George Hoffmann
More, Thomas. The Essential Works of Thomas More. Ed. Gerard Wegemer and Stephen Smith.
Article | Contributor(s): Arazoo Ferozan
Sachet, Paolo. Publishing for the Popes. The Roman Curia and the Use of Printing (1527–1555).
Article | Contributor(s): Michele Lodone
Vester, Matthew. Transregional Lordship and the Italian Renaissance: René de Challant, 1504–1565.
Article | Contributor(s): Mack P. Holt
Interpreting in Early Modern Diplomacy: Occasional Mobility and the Liminal Spaces of Trust
Article | Contributor(s): Andrea Rizzi
In this article, I examine the relationship between mobility and trust in the work and life of a wide range of early modern diplomatic interpreters. I address this relationship by bringing together archival material unearthed by literary scholars and social historians: specifically, historians of...
Relaying the Epistemic Foundations of a Transcultural Natural Theology: Proving the Existence of God in Valignano’s Catechismus christianae fidei and Ruggieri’s Tianzhu shilu
Article | Contributor(s): Daniel Canaris
When European missionaries first entered Asia and the New World, they largely transposed to their new contexts European catechisms that assumed the intellectual passivity of the catechumen. The Jesuits, however, soon realized that such textual models would not be appropriate in East Asia which...
Maple Wood Heirlooms and the Re-formation of a Dynastic Identity: Elector John of Saxony’s Sermon Notes as Grapho-Relics
Article | Contributor(s): Daniel Gehrt
The widespread practice of taking notes on sermons as a form of learning and piety among literate Protestants in the sixteenth century has been largely untreated by scholars. This article offers a brief survey of this phenomenon before focusing on two eight-piece sets of palm-sized maple tablets...
The Case of Catherine Dammartin: Friends, Fellows, and the Survival of Celibacy in England’s Protestant Universities
Article | Contributor(s): K. J. Kesselring
Catherine Dammartin began her adult life as a nun in Metz but ended it in 1553 as a wife in an Oxford college. First laid to rest in Christ Church Cathedral, her corpse was later removed as a pollutant then finally restored in a ceremony that saw her bones mixed with those of the virgin St....
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