Andrew Brown explores lay piety in its contexts of landscape, society, and the church, and examines the many different issues and activities which were of contemporary importance, such as the religious guilds, charity, and heresy. He shows how the regional variations in social and economic structure affected parish life, and concluces with an important assessment of the reception of the Reformation in the diocese. This is the first scholarly study of the lay religion of this region, and its broad chronological range of and meticulously researched local focus offer illuminating insights into medieval piety over the centuries.
Brown is able to accomplish as much as he does in this book not only because of the depths he is willing to plumb in the separate analyses of religious institutions but also because of the chronological distance he is willing to travel. This is a rich book....[W]hat [the author] has accomplished here is a thoroughly interesting and compelling study of late-medieval piety in one diocese. It may well serve as a model for other local historians willing to engage in this important inquiry. --
Speculum An excellent regional study. --
American Historical Review Brown's study of popular religion in late medieval England is broader in implication than its modest scope initially promises...His writing is unpretentious and gracefully touched with humor...Brown's study of the arcane details of medieval piety has, in the end, the effect of diminishing its strangeness and distance from ourselves. It is, in short, enlightening. --hurch History
A careful, balanced, and sensible study of a controversial period in church history. --
Religious Studies Review An excellently researched book... --
The Albion