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"War with None But Hell and Rome:" Puritan Anti-Catholicism in Early New England
- Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- For the first century of its existence, colonial Puritanism in New England embraced anti-Catholicism. It first emerged out of anti-Catholic efforts to continue the Reformation in England, by removing Catholic rituals, symbols, ideas, and people from the English church, state, and society. Through the processes of migration and settlement-building in the unique contexts of the New England borderlands, their once “English” anti-Catholicism evolved and became “Americanized.” Puritans felt this new “Americanized” anti-Catholicism on an everyday basis, making colonial Puritan anti-Catholicism more intense than its English counterpart. Embracing an anti-Catholic “errand” into the New England borderlands, a region filled with new people and geography that was far from the reaches of the English state, colonial Puritans experimented with and crafted their religious, political, and social institutions, practices, and identities on anti-Catholicism. Catholics became “the Other,” imagined as violent and oppressive tyrants, plotters, murderers, and even the anti-Christ, from which colonial Puritans defined their community in opposition. Constant conflict with Indigenous peoples, New France, and “popery” raised anxieties and fears over the very survival of Puritan communities. As a result, New Englanders passed stranger laws—regulations, oaths, and other means to control the presence of alien peoples—to restrict Catholic “strangers” within their colonies. By exploring the relationship between the colonies of New England and Ireland, it becomes clear that the English language of civility and violence, which was employed in New England against both Indigenous peoples and Catholics, originated within the process of Irish colonization. This language was thus tied to that colonization’s virulent anti-Catholicism, which was then transported to New England.
- Subjects :
- American History
History
American Literature
European History
Law
Religion
Religious History
Catholicism
anti-Catholicism
England
New England, Puritans
Puritanism
borderlands
violence
stranger
Ireland
Rome
popery
New France
Indians
Indigenous
Mather
Massachusetts
American
America
colonial
history
colonies
frontier
Catholic
Boston
Plymouth
Puritan
Catholics
pope
papal
Irish
French
tyrant
plot
Atlantic
Tudor
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenDissertations
- Publication Type :
- Dissertation/ Thesis
- Accession number :
- ddu.oai.etd.ohiolink.edu.akron1721934012695757