Michael Questier
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Seminary colleges, converts and religious change in post-Reformation England, 1568–1688
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The English college network on the continent, like its Irish, Scots and Dutch counterparts, had its origins in the sixteenth century. Under the leadership of William Allen, Oxford Catholic exiles set up a seminary for English clergy in Douai in 1568. The claim of contemporary Catholics was that the clergymen were simply continuing in the tradition established by previous missionaries sent from Rome. True religion, it was frequently averred, had always come to England from the Holy City. Even if the Reformation in England clearly succeeded in a way that it never did in Ireland, there were plenty of Protestants who thought that it had not succeeded anything like enough. In 1603-1604 there was an extensive seminarist-led Catholic toleration campaign, via manuscript and print, mirroring the better known puritan one at this point and saying more noisily what was implicit in so much of the appellant pamphleteering.

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College communities abroad

Education, migration and Catholicism in early modern Europe

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