David J. Crankshaw
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Chaplains to the Elizabethan nobility
Activities, categories and patterns
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This chapter argues that some chaplains to the Elizabethan nobility did enjoy an important cultural agency though whether or not that agency came about because of their chaplaincies is difficult to determine. Dr Henry Parry had subsequently become a chaplain to Elizabeth I and had followed Dr Gervase Babington at Worcester, where a monument commemorates his 'assiduous preaching'. Abraham Conham, a Cambridge BD, had replaced Babington as chaplain, lauding his predecessor in a preface to Babington's 1583 work. Alban Langdale, long-standing chaplain to the Roman Catholic 1st Viscount Montague, endorsed an indenture about a marriage settlement. The problem addressed in the chapter is about the extent to which chaplaincy was instrumental. The chaplaincy was instrumental in the cultural agency of men who, for part of their careers, happen to have been chaplains to the Elizabethan nobility.

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Chaplains in early modern England

Patronage, literature and religion

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