Death, life, and religious change in Scottish towns c. 13501560
By (author) Mairi Cowan
Publication date:
01 January 2013Length of book:
264 pagesPublisher
Manchester University PressDimensions:
216x138mmISBN-13: 9780719080234
Cowan’s arguments in favour of Catholic Reformation, as she asserts, is “go against the grain of Scottish historiography”. They certainly challenge stereotypical interpretations about intransigence and reaction. In its presentation of what is familiar in a case study that largely conforms to larger outlines, as well as what is off the beaten track for so much sixteenth-century historiography, she offers a compelling example of how a (Toronto) dissertation can become a book well deserving a wide readership.'
Any student of medieval religion will welcome this thorough analysis of Christian belief in late medieval / early modern Scotland.
In a highly readable book, Mairi Cowan explores the religious culture of Scottish towns in the period between the Black Death and the Scottish Reformation.
Dr Cowan has written a richly detailed, engaging study that successfully integrates the Scottish experience into our broader understanding of late medieval religious culture.