[1]
Ackroyd, Peter R. et al. 1963. The Cambridge history of the Bible. Cambridge University Press.
[2]
Backus, I.D. 2008. Life writing in Reformation Europe: lives of reformers by friends, disciples and foes. Ashgate.
[3]
Bagchi, David V. N. and Steinmetz, David Curtis 2004. The Cambridge companion to Reformation theology. Cambridge University Press.
[4]
Bamji, A. et al. 2013. The Ashgate research companion to the Counter-Reformation. Ashgate.
[5]
Barbara Diefendorf Prologue to a Massacre: Popular Unrest in Paris, 1557-1572. The American Historical Review. Vol. 90, No. 5, 1067–1091.
[6]
Baumgartner, Frederic J. 1995. France in the sixteenth century.
[7]
Bender, Harold Stauffer et al. The Mennonite quarterly review.
[8]
Bender, H.S. 1944. The Anabaptist Vision. Church History. 13, 01 (Mar. 1944). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3161001.
[9]
Benedict, Philip 2002. Christ’s churches purely reformed: a social history of Calvinism. Yale University Press.
[10]
Benedict, Philip 1992. Cities and social change in early modern France. Routledge.
[11]
Benedict, Philip 1981. Rouen during the Wars of Religion. Cambridge University Press.
[12]
Bergendoff, C. and Project MUSE. The Lutheran quarterly.
[13]
Bergsten, T. and Estep, W.R. 1978. Balthasar Hubmaier: Anabaptist theologian and martyr. Judson Press.
[14]
BÉVENOT, M. 1963. ‘Traditiones’ in the Council of Trent. The Heythrop Journal. 4, 4 (Oct. 1963), 333–347. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2265.1963.tb00951.x.
[15]
BÉVENOT, M. 1963. ‘Traditiones’ in the Council of Trent. The Heythrop Journal. 4, 4 (Oct. 1963), 333–347. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2265.1963.tb00951.x.
[16]
Bireley, Robert 1999. The refashioning of Catholicism, 1450-1700: a reassessment of the Counter Reformation. Macmillan.
[17]
Black, C.F. 2004. Church, religion, and society in early modern Italy. Palgrave Macmillan.
[18]
Blaisdell, C.J. 1982. Calvin’s Letters to Women: The Courting of Ladies in High Places. Sixteenth Century Journal. 13, 3 (Autumn 1982). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2539605.
[19]
Blaisdell, C.J. 1982. Calvin’s Letters to Women: The Courting of Ladies in High Places. Sixteenth Century Journal. 13, 3 (Autumn 1982). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2539605.
[20]
Blickle, Peter 1992. Communal reformation: the quest for salvation in sixteenth-century Germany. Humanities Press.
[21]
Blickle, Peter 1992. Communal reformation: the quest for salvation in sixteenth-century Germany. Humanities Press.
[22]
Blickle, Peter 1981. The Revolution of 1525: the German Peasants’ War from a new perspective. Johns Hopkins University Press.
[23]
Boer, W. de 2000. The conquest of the soul: confession, discipline, and public order in Counter-Reformation Milan. Brill.
[24]
Bouwsma, William James 1988. John Calvin: a sixteenth-century portrait. Oxford University Press.
[25]
Brady, Thomas A. and American Council of Learned Societies 1985. Turning Swiss: cities and empire, 1450-1550. Cambridge University Press.
[26]
Brecht, Martin 1985. Martin Luther: [Vol. 1]: His road to Reformation, 1483-1521. Fortress Press.
[27]
Brecht, Martin 1990. Martin Luther: [Vol 2]: Shaping and defining the Reformation, 1521-1532. Fortress Press.
[28]
Brill Studies in Medieval and Reformation Thought: http://eleanor.lib.gla.ac.uk/search~S5/Z?search=Studies in Medieval and Reformation Thought &SORT=D&searchScope=5&m=.
[29]
Broadhead, P.J. 2005. Public Worship, Liturgy and the Introduction of the Lutheran Reformation in the Territorial Lands of Nuremberg. The English Historical Review. 120, 486 (Apr. 2005), 277–302. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cei116.
[30]
Bruening, M.W. and SpringerLink (Online service) 2005. Calvinism’s first battleground: conflict and reform in the Pays de Vaud, 1528-1559. Springer.
[31]
Burnett, A.N. and Oxford University Press 2011. Karlstadt and the origins of the Eucharistic controversy: a study in the circulation of ideas. Oxford University Press.
[32]
Cahill, R.A. 2001. Philipp of Hesse and the Reformation. P. von Zabern.
[33]
Cambridge University Press The journal of ecclesiastical history.
[34]
Cameron, Euan 1991. The European Reformation. Clarendon Press.
[35]
Cameron, James K. and Church of Scotland 1972. The first book of discipline. Saint Andrew Press.
[36]
Cameron, Keith et al. 2000. The adventure of religious pluralism in early modern France: papers from the Exeter conference April 1999. Peter Lang.
[37]
Carroll, S. 2006. Blood and violence in early modern France. Oxford University Press.
[38]
Chadwyck-Healey, Inc 1996. King James Bible. Chadwyck-Healey.
[39]
Chung-Kim, E. 2011. Inventing authority: the use of the Church Fathers in Reformation debates over the Eucharist. Baylor University Press.
[40]
Chung-Kim, E. 2011. Inventing authority: the use of the Church Fathers in Reformation debates over the Eucharist. Baylor University Press.
[41]
Clasen, Claus-Peter 1972. Anabaptism: a social history, 1525-1618: Switzerland, Austria, Moravia, South and Central Germany. Cornell University Press.
[42]
Classen, A. and Settle, T.A. 1991. Women in Martin Luther’s Life and Theology. German Studies Review. 14, 2 (May 1991). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1430561.
[43]
Coffey, J. and Lim, P.C.-H. 2008. The Cambridge companion to Puritanism. Cambridge University Press.
[44]
Collinson, Patrick 1988. The birthpangs of Protestant England: religious and cultural change in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries : the third Anstey memorial lectures in the University of Kent at Canterbury, 12-15 May 1986. Macmillan.
[45]
Collinson, Patrick 1982. The religion of Protestants: the church in English society 1559-1625. Clarendon Press.
[46]
Comerford, K.M. 1998. Italian Tridentine Diocesan Seminaries: A Historiographical Study. Sixteenth Century Journal. 29, 4 (Winter 1998). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2543355.
[47]
Conner, P. 2002. Huguenot heartland: Montauban and Southern French Calvinism during the wars of religion. Ashgate.
[48]
Cottret, Bernard 2000. Calvin: a biography. William B. Eerdmans.
[49]
Cowan, Ian B. 1982. The Scottish reformation: church and society in sixteenth century Scotland. Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
[50]
Cressy, David and Ferrell, Lori Anne 2005. Religion and society in early modern England: a sourcebook. Routledge.
[51]
Cruz, Anne J. and Perry, Mary Elizabeth 1992. Culture and control in counter-reformation Spain. University of Minnesota Press.
[52]
Cushner, N.P. and Oxford University Press 2006. Why have you come here?: the Jesuits and the first evangelization of native America. Oxford University Press.
[53]
David Gentilcore Methods and Approaches in the Social History of the Counter-Reformation in Italy. Social History. Vol. 17, No. 1, 73–98.
[54]
David M., W. 2008. The Papal Antichrist: Martin Luther and the Underappreciated Influence of Lorenzo Valla. Renaissance Quarterly. 61, 1 (2008), 26–52. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/ren.2008.0027.
[55]
David M., W. 2008. The Papal Antichrist: Martin Luther and the Underappreciated Influence of Lorenzo Valla. Renaissance Quarterly. 61, 1 (2008), 26–52. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/ren.2008.0027.
[56]
Davidson, N. S. 1987. The Counter-Reformation. Basil Blackwell.
[57]
Davies, J. 1979. Persecution and Protestantism: Toulouse, 1562–1575. The Historical Journal. 22, 01 (Mar. 1979). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X00016666.
[58]
Davies, J. 1979. Persecution and Protestantism: Toulouse, 1562–1575. The Historical Journal. 22, 01 (Mar. 1979). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X00016666.
[59]
Davis, Natalie Zemon and American Council of Learned Societies 1975. Society and culture in early modern France: eight essays. Stanford University Press.
[60]
Davis, N.Z. 1981. THE SACRED AND THE BODY SOCIAL IN SIXTEENTH-CENTURY LYON. Past and Present. 90, 1 (1981), 40–70. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/past/90.1.40.
[61]
Davis, Thomas J. 2008. This is my body: the presence of Christ in Reformation thought. Baker Academic.
[62]
Davis, T.J. 1993. The clearest promises of God: the development of Calvin’s eucharistic teaching. AMS Press.
[63]
Davis, T.J. ‘The Truth of the Divine Words’: Luther’s Sermons on the Eucharist, 1521-28, and the Structure of Eucharistic Meaning. The Sixteenth Century Journal. Vol. 30, No. 2, 323–342.
[64]
Dawson, J.E.A. 2007. Scotland re-formed, 1488-1587. Edinburgh University Press Ltd.
[65]
Dawson, J.E.A. and Ebooks Corporation Limited 2007. Scotland re-formed, 1488-1587. Edinburgh University Press Ltd.
[66]
Delumeau, Jean 1977. Catholicism between Luther and Voltaire: a new view of the Counter-Reformation. Burns & Oates.
[67]
DeMolen, R.L. and Olin, J.C. 1994. Religious orders of the Catholic Reformation: in honor of John C. Olin on his seventy-fifth birthday. Fordham University Press.
[68]
Deppermann, K. and Drewery, B. 1987. Melchior Hoffman: social unrest and apocalyptic visions in the Age of Reformation. T. & T. Clark.
[69]
Dickens, A. G. 1967. Martin Luther and the Reformation. English Universities Press.
[70]
Dickens, A. G. 1989. The English Reformation. Batsford.
[71]
Diefendorf, B. 1985. Prologue to a Massacre: Popular Unrest in Paris, 1557-1572. The American Historical Review. 90, 5 (Dec. 1985). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1859659.
[72]
Diefendorf, Barbara B. 1991. Beneath the cross: Catholics and Huguenots in sixteenth century Paris. Oxford.
[73]
Dixon, C. Scott 1999. The German reformation: the essential readings. Blackwell.
[74]
Dixon, C. Scott 2002. The Reformation in Germany. Blackwell Publishers.
[75]
Dixon, C.S. 2007. Urban Order and Religious Coexistence in the German Imperial City: Augsburg and Donauwörth, 1548–1608. Central European History. 40, 01 (Mar. 2007). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S000893890700026X.
[76]
Donaldson, Gordon The Scottish Reformation. Cambridge University Press.
[77]
Donnelly, John Patrick 2004. Ignatius of Loyola: founder of the Jesuits. Pearson Longman.
[78]
Duffy, E. 2001. The voices of Morebath: Reformation and rebellion in an English village. Yale University Press.
[79]
Duffy, E. and Ebooks Corporation Limited 2009. Fires of faith: Catholic England under Mary Tudor. Yale University Press.
[80]
Duffy, E. and Loades, D.M. 2006. The church of Mary Tudor. Ashgate.
[81]
Duffy, Eamon 2005. The stripping of the altars: traditional religion in England c.1400-c.1580. Yale University Press.
[82]
Duke, A. C. et al. 1992. Calvinism in Europe, 1540-1610: a collection of documents. Manchester University Press.
[83]
Duke, A. C. et al. 1992. Calvinism in Europe, 1540-1610: a collection of documents. Manchester University Press.
[84]
E. William Monter 1976. The Consistory of Geneva, 1559-1569. Bibliothèque d’Humanisme et Renaissance. 3 (1976), 467–484.
[85]
Edwards, M.U. 1983. Luther’s last battles: politics and polemics, 1531-46. Cornell University Press.
[86]
Edwards, M.U. 2005. Printing, propaganda, and Martin Luther. Fortress Press.
[87]
Elwood, Christopher 1999. The Body broken: the Calvinist doctrine of the Eucharist and the symbolization of power in sixteenth-century France. Oxford University Press.
[88]
Engammare, M. and Maag, K. 2010. On time, punctuality, and discipline in early modern Calvinism. Cambridge University Press.
[89]
Erikson, Erik H. 1958. Young man Luther: a study in psychoanalysis and history. Faber & Faber.
[90]
Estes, J.M. 2005. Peace, order and the glory of God: secular authority and the church in the thought of Luther and Melanchthon. Brill.
[91]
Evennett, H.O. and Bossy, J. 1968. The spirit of the Counter-Reformation: the Birkbeck lectures in ecclesiastical history given in the University of Cambridge in May 1951, by the late H. Outram Evennett. Cambridge University Press.
[92]
Foa, J. 2004. Making Peace: The Commissions for Enforcing the Pacification Edicts in the Reign of Charles IX (1560-1574). French History. 18, 3 (Sep. 2004), 256–274. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/fh/18.3.256.
[93]
Foundation for Reformation Research et al. 1972. The sixteenth century journal. (1972).
[94]
Friesen, A. 1990. Thomas Muentzer, a destroyer of the godless: the making of a sixteenth-century religious revolutionary. University of California Press.
[95]
Furcha, E. J and Pipkin, H. Wayne 1984. Prophet, pastor, Protestant: the work of Huldrych Zwingli after five hundred years. Pickwick Publications.
[96]
Galpern, A.N. and American Council of Learned Societies 1976. The religions of the people in sixteenth-century Champagne. Harvard University Press.
[97]
Ganoczy, A. 1988. The young Calvin. T. & T. Clark.
[98]
Gèabler, Ulrich 1987. Huldrych Zwingli: his life and work. T. & T. Clark.
[99]
Goertz, Hans-Jèurgen 1996. The Anabaptists. Routledge.
[100]
Goertz, Hans-Jèurgen and Matheson, Peter 1993. Thomas Mèuntzer: apocalyptic mystic and revolutionary. T. & T. Clark Ltd.
[101]
Goodale, J. 2002. Pastors, Privation, and the Process of Reformation in Saxony. Sixteenth Century Journal. 33, 1 (Spring 2002). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/4144243.
[102]
Gordon, B. and Askews & Holts Library Services 2009. Calvin. Yale University Press.
[103]
Gordon, B. and MyiLibrary 2009. Calvin. Yale University Press.
[104]
Gordon, Bruce 2009. Calvin. Yale University Press.
[105]
Gordon, Bruce 2002. The Swiss Reformation. Manchester University Press.
[106]
Graham, Michael F. 1996. The uses of reform: ‘godly discipline’ and popular behavior in Scotland and France, 1560-1610. E.J. Brill.
[107]
Graham, W.F. 1994. Later Calvinism: international perspectives. Sixteenth Century Journal Publishers.
[108]
Grebel, K. and Harder, L. 1985. The sources of Swiss anabaptism: the Grebel letters and related documents. Herald Press.
[109]
Greengrass, Mark 1987. The French Reformation. Basil Blackwell.
[110]
Gregory, Brad S. 1999. Salvation at stake: Christian martyrdom in early modern Europe. Harvard University Press.
[111]
Grell, O.P. and Scribner, R.W. 1996. Tolerance and intolerance in the European reformation. Cambridge University Press.
[112]
Gritsch, E.W. 1989. Thomas Müntzer: a tragedy of errors. Fortress Press.
[113]
Haigh, C. 2001. Success and Failure in the English Reformation. Past & Present. 173, 1 (Nov. 2001), 28–49. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/past/173.1.28.
[114]
Haigh, C. 1981. THE CONTINUITY OF CATHOLICISM IN THE ENGLISH REFORMATION. Past and Present. 93, 1 (1981), 37–69. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/past/93.1.37.
[115]
Haigh, C. 1981. THE CONTINUITY OF CATHOLICISM IN THE ENGLISH REFORMATION. Past and Present. 93, 1 (1981), 37–69. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/past/93.1.37.
[116]
Haigh, Christopher 1993. English reformations: religion, politics, and society under the Tudors. Clarendon Press.
[117]
Hallman, B.M. 1985. Italian cardinals, reform and the church as property, [1492-1563]. University of California Press.
[118]
Harding, R.R. 1980. The Mobilization of Confraternities against the Reformation in France. Sixteenth Century Journal. 11, 2 (Summer 1980). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2540034.
[119]
Harline, C. 1904. Official Religion – Popular Religion in Recent Historiography of the Catholic Reformation. Archiv fèur Reformationsgeschichte: Archive for reformation history. 81, (1904), 239–262.
[120]
Harrington, J.F. 1995. Reordering marriage and society in Reformation Germany. Cambridge University Press.
[121]
Headley, J.M. et al. 1988. San Carlo Borromeo: Catholic reform and ecclesiastical politics in the second half of the sixteenth century. Folger Shakespeare Library.
[122]
Heal, F. and Oxford University Press 2003. Reformation in Britain and Ireland. Oxford University Press.
[123]
Heiko Oberman Teufelsdreck: Eschatology and Scatology in the ‘Old’ Luther. The Sixteenth Century Journal. Vol. 19, No. 3, 435–450.
[124]
Heller, Henry 1986. The conquest of poverty: the Calvinist revolt in sixteenth century France. Brill.
[125]
Hillerbrand, H.J. and Oxford University Press 2005. The Oxford encyclopedia of the Reformation. Oxford University Press.
[126]
Hoffman, Philip T. 1984. Church and community in the Diocese of Lyon, 1500-1789. Yale University Press.
[127]
Holt, Mack P. 2002. Renaissance and Reformation France, 1500-1648. Oxford University Press.
[128]
Holt, Mack P. and American Council of Learned Societies 1995. The French wars of religion, 1562-1629. Cambridge University Press.
[129]
Holt, M.P. 1993. WINE, COMMUNITY AND REFORMATION IN SIXTEENTH–CENTURY BURGUNDY. Past and Present. 138, 1 (1993), 58–93. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/past/138.1.58.
[130]
Holt, M.P. 1993. WINE, COMMUNITY AND REFORMATION IN SIXTEENTH–CENTURY BURGUNDY. Past and Present. 138, 1 (1993), 58–93. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/past/138.1.58.
[131]
Höpfl, H. 1982. The Christian polity of John Calvin. Cambridge University Press.
[132]
Hsia, R. Po-chia 2007. Reform and expansion 1500-1660. Cambridge University Press.
[133]
Hsia, R. Po-chia 1988. The German people and the Reformation. Cornell University Press.
[134]
Hsia, R. Po-chia 1998. The world of Catholic renewal, 1540-1770. Cambridge University Press.
[135]
Janz, Denis 2008. A reformation reader: primary texts with introductions. Fortress Press.
[136]
Jedin, Hubert 1957. A history of the Council of Trent. T. Nelson.
[137]
John W. O’Malley 1991. Was Ignatius Loyola a Church Reformer? How to Look at Early Modern Catholicism. The Catholic Historical Review. 77, 2 (1991), 177–193.
[138]
Jones, Martin D. W. 1995. The Counter Reformation: religion and society in early modern Europe. Cambridge University Press.
[139]
Jones, N.L. 2002. The English Reformation: religion and cultural adaptation. Blackwell.
[140]
Karant-Nunn, S.C. 1997. The reformation of ritual: an interpretation of early modern Germany. Routledge.
[141]
Karant-Nunn, S.C. and Wiesner, M.E. eds. 2003. Luther on women: a sourcebook. Cambridge University Press.
[142]
Kingdon, R.M. 1995. Adultery and divorce in Calvin’s Geneva. Harvard University Press.
[143]
Kingdon, R.M. 1980. Geneva and the coming of the wars of religion in France, 1555-1563. University Microfilms International.
[144]
Kingdon, R.M. Social Welfare in Calvin’s Geneva. The American Historical Review. Vol. 76, No. 1, 50–69.
[145]
Kingdon, Robert McCune 1967. Geneva and the consolidation of the French Protestant movement, 1564-1572: a contribution to the history of Congregationalism, Presbyterianism, and Calvinist resistance theory. University of Wisconsin Press.
[146]
Kingdon, Robert McCune 1988. Myths about the St. Bartholomew’s Day massacres, 1572-1576. Harvard University Press.
[147]
Kirk, J. et al. 1991. Humanism and reform: the church in Europe, England and Scotland, 1400-1643 : essays in honour of James K. Cameron. Blackwell for Ecclesiastical History Society.
[148]
Kirk, James 1989. Patterns of reform: continuity and change in the Reformation kirk. T. & T. Clark.
[149]
Kirk, James and Church of Scotland 1980. The second book of discipline. Saint Andrew Press.
[150]
Klaassen, W. 2001. Anabaptism: neither Catholic nor Protestant. Pandora Press.
[151]
Klaassen, Walter and Goertz, Hans-Jèurgen 1982. Profiles of radical reformers: biographical sketches from Thomas Mèuntzer to Paracelsus. Herald Press.
[152]
Knecht, R. J. 1998. Catherine De’ Medici. Longman.
[153]
Knecht, R. J. 1996. The French wars of religion, 1559-1598. Longman.
[154]
Knecht, R. J. 2001. The rise and fall of Renaissance France, 1483-1610. Blackwell Publishers.
[155]
Knecht, R.J. 2010. The French Wars of Religion, 1559-1598. Longman.
[156]
Konnert, M.W. 2006. Local politics in the French Wars of Religion: the towns of Champagne, the Duc de Guise, and the Catholic League, 1560-95. Ashgate Pub.
[157]
Koslofsky, C. 2000. The reformation of the dead: death and ritual in early modern Germany, 1450-1700. Macmillan.
[158]
Krahn, C. 1968. Dutch Anabaptism: origin, spread, life and thought, 1450-1600. Nijhoff.
[159]
Lake, Peter 1982. Moderate puritans and the Elizabethan church. Cambridge University Press.
[160]
Leroux, N.R. 2002. Luther’s rhetoric: strategies and style from the Invocavit sermons. Concordia Academic Press.
[161]
Letis, T.P. 2002. The ‘Vulgata Latina’ as Sacred Text: What Did the Council of Trent Mean When it Claimed Jerome’s Bible was ‘Authentica’? Reformation. 7, 1 (Jan. 2002), 1–21. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1179/ref_2002_7_1_002.
[162]
Letis, T.P. 2002. The ‘Vulgata Latina’ as Sacred Text: What Did the Council of Trent Mean When it Claimed Jerome’s Bible was ‘Authentica’? Reformation. 7, 1 (Jan. 2002), 1–21. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1179/ref_2002_7_1_002.
[163]
Lindberg, Carter 2002. Reformation theologians: an introduction to theology in the early modern period. Blackwell.
[164]
Lindberg, Carter 2000. The European reformations sourcebook. Blackwell Publishing.
[165]
Loach, J. et al. 1999. Edward VI. Yale University Press.
[166]
Loach, J. 1986. The Marian Establishment and the Printing Press. The English Historical Review. CI, CCCXCVIII (1986), 135–148. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/CI.CCCXCVIII.135.
[167]
Lohse, Bernhard 1987. Martin Luther: an introduction to his life and work. T. & T. Clark.
[168]
Lotz-Heumann, U. and Pohlig, M. 2007. Confessionalization and Literature in the Empire, 1555–1700. Central European History. 40, 01 (Mar. 2007). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0008938907000271.
[169]
Luebke, David Martin 1999. The Counter-Reformation: the essential readings. Blackwell.
[170]
Lund, Eric 2002. Documents from the history of Lutheranism, 1517-1750. Fortress Press.
[171]
Lynch, M. 1994. Preaching to the converted? The Renaissance in Scotland: studies in literature, religion, history, and culture offered to John Durkhan. E.J. Brill.
[172]
Maag, Karin 1995. Seminary or university?: the Genevan Academy and reformed higher education, 1560-1620. Scolar Press.
[173]
MacCulloch, Diarmaid 2003. Reformation: Europe’s house divided, 1490-1700. Penguin.
[174]
MacCulloch, Diarmaid 1990. The later Reformation in England, 1547-1603. Macmillan Education.
[175]
MacCulloch, Diarmaid 1999. Tudor church militant: Edward VI and the protestant reformation. Allen Lane.
[176]
MacDonald, Alan R. 1998. The Jacobean Kirk, 1567-1625: sovereignty, polity, and liturgy. Ashgate.
[177]
Macy, Gary 1992. The Banquet’s wisdom: a short history of the theologies of the Lord’s Supper. Paulist Press.
[178]
Major, J. Russell 1994. From Renaissance monarchy to absolute monarchy: French kings, nobles, & estates. Johns Hopkins University Press.
[179]
Marius, Richard 1999. Martin Luther: the Christian between God and death. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
[180]
Marsh, Christopher W. 1998. Popular religion in sixteenth-century England: holding their peace. Macmillan.
[181]
Marshall, P. 1997. The impact of the English Reformation, 1500-1640. Arnold.
[182]
Marshall, Peter 2003. Reformation England, 1480-1642. Arnold.
[183]
Marshall, Peter and Ryrie, Alec 2002. The beginnings of English Protestantism. Cambridge University Press.
[184]
Martin, J. and Ryrie, A. 2012. Private and domestic devotion in early modern Britain. Ashgate.
[185]
Marty, M.E. 2008. Martin Luther: a life. Penguin Books.
[186]
McCallum, J. ed. 2016. Scotland’s long reformation: new perspectives on Scottish religion, c. 1500-c. 1660. Brill.
[187]
McCallum, John 2010. Reforming the Scottish parish: the Reformation in Fife, 1560-1640. Ashgate.
[188]
McCoog, T.M. 2012. The Society of Jesus in Ireland, Scotland, and England, 1589-1597: building the faith of Saint Peter upon the King of Spain’s monarchy. Ashgate.
[189]
McGrath, A.E. 2011. Luther’s theology of the Cross: Martin Luther’s theological breakthrough. Wiley-Blackwell.
[190]
McGrath, Alister E. 1990. A life of John Calvin: a study in the shaping of Western culture. Blackwell.
[191]
McKee, E.A. 2016. The pastoral ministry and worship in Calvin’s Geneva. Librairie Droz S.A.
[192]
McKim, D.K. ed. 2003. The Cambridge Companion to Martin Luther. Cambridge University Press.
[193]
McKim, Donald K. 2004. The Cambridge companion to John Calvin. Cambridge University Press.
[194]
McRoberts, David 1962. Essays on the Scottish Reformation, 1513-1625. J.S. Burns.
[195]
Mears, N. and Ryrie, A. 2013. Worship and the parish church in early modern Britain. Ashgate.
[196]
Mentzer, R.A. 1996. The Persistence of "Superstition and Idolatry” among Rural French Calvinists. Church History. 65, 02 (Jun. 1996). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3170289.
[197]
Minnich, Nelson H. 2008. Councils of the Catholic Reformation: Pisa I (1409) to Trent (1545-63). Ashgate Varorium.
[198]
Monter, E.W. 1967. Calvin’s Geneva. Wiley.
[199]
Mullan, David George 1986. Episcopacy in Scotland: the history of an idea, 1560-1638. Donald.
[200]
Mullan, David George 2000. Scottish Puritanism, 1590-1638. Oxford University Press.
[201]
Muller, Richard A. 2000. The unaccommodated Calvin: studies in the foundation of a theological tradition. Oxford University.
[202]
Muller, Richard A. and Oxford University Press 2003. After Calvin: studies in the development of a theological tradition. Oxford University Press.
[203]
Mullett, Michael A. 1999. The Catholic Reformation. Routledge.
[204]
Murdock, G. 2000. Calvinism on the frontier, 1600-1660: international Calvinism and the Reformed Church in Hungary and Transylvania. Clarendon Press.
[205]
Murdock, Graeme 2004. Beyond Calvin: the intellectual, political and cultural world of Europe’s Reformed churches, c. 1540-1620. Palgrave Macmillan.
[206]
Naphy, W.G. 1995. Baptisms, Church Riots and Social Unrest in Calvin’s Geneva. Sixteenth Century Journal. 26, 1 (Spring 1995). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2541527.
[207]
Naphy, William G. 1994. Calvin and the consolidation of the Genevan Reformation. Manchester University Press.
[208]
Naphy, William G. 1996. Documents on the Continental reformation. Macmillan Press.
[209]
Nicholls, D. 2011. Inertia and Reform in the Pre-Tridentine French Church: the Response to Protestantism in the Diocese of Rouen, 1520–1562. The Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 32, 02 (Mar. 2011), 185–197. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S002204690003267X.
[210]
NICHOLLS, D. 1994. PROTESTANTS, CATHOLICS AND MAGISTRATES IN TOURS, 1562–1572: THE MAKING OF A CATHOLIC CITY DURING THE RELIGIOUS WARS. French History. 8, 1 (1994), 14–33. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/fh/8.1.14.
[211]
Nicholls, D. 1988. THE THEATRE OF MARTYRDOM IN THE FRENCH REFORMATION. Past and Present. 121, 1 (1988), 49–73. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/past/121.1.49.
[212]
Nicholls, D.J. 2009. The Nature of Popular Heresy in France, 1520–1542. The Historical Journal. 26, 02 (Feb. 2009). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X00024067.
[213]
Oberman, Heiko Augustinus and Walliser-Schwarzbart, Eileen 1993. Luther: man between God and the Devil. Fontana.
[214]
Olin, John C. 1990. Catholic reform from Cardinal Ximenes to the Council of Trent, 1495-1563: an essay with illustrative documents and a brief study of St. Ignatius Loyola. Fordham University Press.
[215]
Olin, John C. 1992. The Catholic Reformation: Savonarola to Ignatius Loyola. Fordham University Press.
[216]
Olson, Jeannine E. 1989. Calvin and social welfare: deacons and the Bourse française. Susquehanna University Press.
[217]
O’Malley, John W. et al. 2001. Early modern Catholicism: essays in honour of John W. O’Malley, S.J. University of Toronto Press.
[218]
O’Malley, John W. 2000. Trent and all that: renaming Catholicism in the early modern era. Harvard University Press.
[219]
O’Malley, J.W. 1974. Erasmus and Luther, Continuity and Discontinuity As Key to Their Conflict. Sixteenth Century Journal. 5, 2 (Oct. 1974). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2539821.
[220]
O’Malley, J.W. 1993. The first Jesuits. Harvard University Press.
[221]
O’Malley, J.W. 2013. Trent: what happened at the council. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
[222]
Oxford University Press 2014. The concise Oxford dictionary of the Christian Church. Oxford University Press.
[223]
Ozment, S.E. 1975. The Reformation in the cities: the appeal of Protestantism to sixteenth-century Germany and Switzerland. Yale University Press.
[224]
P. G. Lake 1987. Calvinism and the English Church 1570-1635. Past & Present. 114 (1987), 32–76.
[225]
Parker, T.H.L. 1995. Calvin: an introduction to his thought. G. Chapman.
[226]
Parker, T.H.L. 1969. Calvin’s doctrine of the knowledge of God. Oliver & Boyd.
[227]
Parker, T.H.L. 1987. John Calvin. Lion.
[228]
Past and Present Society et al. 1952. Past & present. (1952).
[229]
Pater, Calvin Augustine 1984. Karlstadt as the father of the Baptist movements: the emergence of lay Protestantism. University of Toronto Press.
[230]
Pettegree, A. 2015. Brand Luther: 1517, printing, and the making of the Reformation. Penguin Press.
[231]
Pettegree, Andrew 2002. Europe in the sixteenth century. Blackwell Publishing.
[232]
Pettegree, Andrew 2002. The Reformation world. Routledge.
[233]
Philip Benedict The Saint Bartholomew’s Massacres in the Provinces. The Historical Journal. Vol. 21, No. 2, 205–225.
[234]
Pitkin, B. 1999. What pure eyes could see: Calvin’s doctrine of faith in its exegetical context. Oxford University Press.
[235]
Potter, David 1997. The French wars of religion: selected documents. Macmillan.
[236]
Potter, G. R. 1976. Zwingli. Cambridge University Press.
[237]
Potter, G. R. 1976. Zwingli. Cambridge University Press.
[238]
Potter, G. R. 1976. Zwingli. Cambridge University Press.
[239]
Prestwich, M. 1985. International Calvinism 1541-1715. Clarendon.
[240]
Questier, M.C. 2006. Catholicism and Community in Early Modern England: Politics, Aristocratic Patronage and Religion, c.1550–1640. Cambridge University Press.
[241]
Reardon, B.M.G. 1995. Religious thought in the Reformation. Longman.
[242]
Reinburg, V. 1992. Liturgy and the Laity in Late Medieval and Reformation France. Sixteenth Century Journal. 23, 3 (Autumn 1992). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2542493.
[243]
Rempel, J.D. 1993. The Lord’s supper in Anabaptism: a study in the Christology of Balthasar Hubmaier, Pilgram Marpeck, and Dirk Philips. Herald Press.
[244]
Rex, Richard 1993. Henry VIII and the English reformation. Macmillan.
[245]
Roberts, P. 2004. Royal Authority and Justice during the French Religious Wars. Past & Present. 184, 1 (Aug. 2004), 3–32. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/past/184.1.3.
[246]
Roberts, Penny 1996. A city in conflict: Troyes during the French wars of religion. Manchester University Press : Distributed exclusively in the USA and Canada by St. Martin’s Press.
[247]
Roelker, N.L. 1996. One king, one faith: the Parlement of Paris and the religious reformations of the sixteenth century. University of California Press.
[248]
Roper, L. 1989. The holy household: women and morals in Reformation Augsburg. Clarendon.
[249]
Roth, J.D. and Stayer, J.M. 2007. A companion to Anabaptism and spiritualism, 1521-1700. Brill.
[250]
Roth, John D. and Stayer, James M. 2007. A companion to Anabaptism and spiritualism, 1521-1700. Brill.
[251]
Rublack, U. ed. 2015. The Oxford handbook of the Protestant Reformations. Oxford University Press.
[252]
Rupp, Gordon 1964. Luther’s progress to the Diet of Worms. Harper Torchbooks.
[253]
Rupp, Gordon 1969. Patterns of Reformation. Epworth Press.
[254]
Russell, W.R. 1994. Martin Luther’s Understanding of the Pope as the Antichrist. Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte. 85, jg (Jan. 1994).
[255]
Russell, W.R. 1994. Martin Luther’s Understanding of the Pope as the Antichrist. Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte. 85, jg (Jan. 1994).
[256]
Ryrie, A. 2013. Being Protestant in Reformation Britain. Oxford University Press.
[257]
Ryrie, A. 2013. Being Protestant in Reformation Britain. Oxford University Press.
[258]
Ryrie, A. 2006. The origins of the Scottish Reformation. Manchester University Press.
[259]
Ryrie, A. 2006. The origins of the Scottish Reformation. Manchester University Press.
[260]
Ryrie, Alec 2006. Palgrave advances in the European reformations. Palgrave Macmillan.
[261]
Ryrie, Alec 2009. The age of Reformation: the Tudor and Stewart realms, 1485-1603. Pearson Longman.
[262]
Ryrie, Alec 2003. The Gospel and Henry VIII: evangelicals in the early English Reformation. Cambridge University Press.
[263]
Scarisbrick, J.J. 1984. The Reformation and the English people. Blackwell.
[264]
Schneider, Robert A Mortification on Parade: Penitential Processions in Sixteenth - and Seventeenth-Century France. Renaissance and Reformation/Renaissance et Réforme. 10, 1.
[265]
Schnucker, R.V. 1988. Calviniana: ideas and influence of Jean Calvin. Sixteenth Century Journal Publishers.
[266]
Scott, T. 2013. The early Reformation in Germany: between secular impact and radical vision. Ashgate.
[267]
Scott, Tom 1989. Thomas Mèuntzer: theology and revolution in the German Reformation. Macmillan.
[268]
Scribner, Robert W. 1981. For the sake of simple folk: popular propaganda for the German Reformation. Cambridge University Press.
[269]
Scribner, Robert W. 1986. The German Reformation. Macmillan.
[270]
Scribner, Robert W. et al. 1994. The Reformation in national context. Cambridge University Press.
[271]
Scribner, Robert W. and Benecke, Gerhard 1979. The German Peasant War of 1525. Allen and Unwin.
[272]
Scribner, R.W. 1986. INCOMBUSTIBLE LUTHER: THE IMAGE OF THE REFORMER IN EARLY MODERN GERMANY. Past and Present. 110, 1 (1986), 38–68. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/past/110.1.38.
[273]
Scribner, R.W. et al. 2003. The German Reformation. Palgrave Macmillan.
[274]
Shagan, E.H. 2005. Catholics and the ‘Protestant nation’: religious politics and identity in early modern England. Manchester University Press.
[275]
Shagan, Ethan H. and American Council of Learned Societies 2003. Popular politics and the English Reformation. Cambridge University Press.
[276]
Sider, Ronald J. 1974. Andreas Bodenstein von Karlstadt: the development of his thought, 1517-1525. Brill.
[277]
Simon, W. 2008. Worship and the Eucharist in Luther Studies. Dialog: A Journal of Theology. 47, 2 (Jun. 2008), 143–156. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6385.2008.00380.x.
[278]
Skinner, Quentin and American Council of Learned Societies 1978. The foundations of modern political thought. Cambridge University Press.
[279]
Snyder, C.A. and Hecht, L.A.H. 1996. Profiles of Anabaptist women: sixteenth-century reforming pioneers. Published for the Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion by Wilfrid Laurier University Press.
[280]
Society for Reformation Studies 1999. Reformation & Renaissance review: journal of the Society for Reformation Studies. (1999).
[281]
Spierling, K.E. 2005. Infant baptism in Reformation Geneva: the shaping of a community, 1536-1564. Ashgate.
[282]
Spruyt, B.J. 2006. Cornelius Henrici Hoen (Honius) and his epistle on the Eucharist (1525): medieval heresy, Erasmian humanism, and Reform in the early sixteenth-century low countries. Brill.
[283]
St Andrews Studies in Reformation History (Ashgate): http://eleanor.lib.gla.ac.uk/search~S6*eng/?searchtype=t&searcharg=St Andrews Studies in Reformation History &searchscope=6&sortdropdown=-&SORT=D&extended=0&SUBMIT=Search&searchlimits=&searchorigarg=tArchiv f%7Bu00FC%7Dr Reformationsgeschichte.
[284]
Stayer et al., J.M. 1975. From Monogenesis to Polygensis: The Historical Discussions of Anabaptist Origins. The Mennonite Quarterly Review. 49, (1975).
[285]
Stayer, James M. et al. 1999. Radical Reformation studies: essays presented to James M. Stayer. Ashgate.
[286]
Steinmetz, David Curtis 1981. Reformers in the wings. Baker Book House.
[287]
Steinmetz, D.C. 1995. Calvin in context. Oxford University Press.
[288]
Steinmetz, D.C. 2001. Reformers in the wings: from Geiler von Kaysersberg to Theodore Beza. Oxford University Press.
[289]
Stephens, W. P. 1986. The theology of Huldrych Zwingli. Clarendon.
[290]
Stephens, W. P. 1992. Zwingli: an introduction to his thought. Clarendon.
[291]
Stevenson, W.R. 1999. Sovereign grace: the place and significance of Christian freedom in John Calvin’s political thought. Oxford University Press.
[292]
Strauss, G. 1978. Luther’s house of learning: indoctrination of the young in the German Reformation. Johns Hopkins University Press.
[293]
Sutherland, N.M. 1973. The massacre of St Bartholomew and the European conflict, 1559-1572. Macmillan.
[294]
Tarr, R. and Randell, K. 2008. Luther and the German Reformation, 1517-55. Hodder Education.
[295]
Tarr, Russel and Randell, Keith 2008. Luther and the German Reformation, 1517-55. Hodder Education.
[296]
Taylor, Larissa 1992. Soldiers of Christ: preaching in late medieval and reformation France. Oxford University Press.
[297]
Tedeschi, John A. 1991. The prosecution of heresy: collected studies on the Inquisition in early modern Italy. Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies.
[298]
The Canons and Decrees of the Sacred and Oecumenical Council of Trent: 1848. https://history.hanover.edu/texts/trent.html.
[299]
Thompson, J.L. 1992. John Calvin and the daughters of Sarah: women in regular and exceptional roles in the exegesis of Calvin, his predecessors, and his contemporaries. Librairie Droz S.A.
[300]
Todd, Margo 2002. The culture of Protestantism in early modern Scotland. Yale University Press.
[301]
Tyacke, N. 1998. England’s long Reformation, 1500-1800. UCL Press.
[302]
Vainio, O.-P. 2008. Justification and participation in Christ: the development of the Lutheran doctrine of justification from Luther to the Formula of concord (1580). Brill.
[303]
Valdés, J. de et al. 1957. Spiritual and Anabaptist writers: documents illustrative of the Radical Reformation. SCM Press.
[304]
Valeri, M. 1997. Religion, Discipline, and the Economy in Calvin’s Geneva. Sixteenth Century Journal. 28, 1 (Spring 1997). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2543226.
[305]
Verduin, L. 1966. The reformers and their stepchildren. Paternoster Press.
[306]
Verein fèur Reformationsgeschichte and American Society for Reformation Research 1904. Archiv fèur Reformationsgeschichte: Archive for reformation history. (1904).
[307]
Wandel, Lee Palmer 1995. Voracious idols and violent hands: iconoclasm in Reformation Zurich, Strasbourg, and Basel. Cambridge University Press.
[308]
Wandel, L.P. ed. 2014. A companion to the Eucharist in the Reformation. Brill.
[309]
Wandel, L.P. 2006. The Eucharist in the Reformation: incarnation and liturgy. Cambridge University Press.
[310]
Watt, Jeffrey R. 2001. Choosing death: suicide and Calvinism in early modern Geneva. Truman State University Press.
[311]
Watt, J.R. 1993. Women and the Consistory in Calvin’s Geneva. Sixteenth Century Journal. 24, 2 (Summer 1993). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2541956.
[312]
Watt, Tessa 1991. Cheap print and popular piety, 1550-1640. Cambridge University Press.
[313]
Wendel, F. 1963. Calvin: the origins and development of his religious thought. Collins.
[314]
Wicks, Jared 1992. Luther’s reform: studies on conversion and the church. Verlag P. von Zabern.
[315]
William V. Hudon Religion and Society in Early Modern Italy--Old Questions, New Insights. The American Historical Review. Vol. 101, No. 3, 783–804.
[316]
Williams, George Huntston 1962. The radical Reformation. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
[317]
Witte, J. and Kingdon, R.M. Sex, marriage, and family in John Calvin’s Geneva: Vol. 1: Courtship, engagement, and marriage. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
[318]
Witte, John and Kingdon, Robert McCune 2005. Sex, marriage, and family in John Calvin’s Geneva: Vol. 1: Courtship, engagement, and marriage. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company.
[319]
Wolfgang Reinhard Reformation, Counter-Reformation, and the Early Modern State a Reassessment. The Catholic Historical Review. Vol. 75, No. 3, 383–404.
[320]
Wooding, L.E.C. 2000. Rethinking Catholicism in Reformation England. Clarendon.
[321]
Worcester, T. ed. 2008. The Cambridge Companion to the Jesuits. Cambridge University Press.
[322]
Wright, A. D. 1982. The Counter-Reformation: Catholic Europe and the non-Christian world. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
[323]
Wright, A. D. 2000. The early modern papacy: from the Council of Trent to the French Revolution, 1564-1789. Longman.
[324]
Yoder, J.H. and Snyder, C.A. 2004. Anabaptism and Reformation in Switzerland: an historical and theological analysis of the dialogues between Anabaptists and Reformers. Pandora Press.
[325]
Zachman, Randall C. 2006. John Calvin as teacher, pastor, and theologian: the shape of his writings and thought. Baker Academic.