- Title Pages
- For my parents
- Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 ‘[T]aking up <i>Plots</i> upon <i>Trust’:</i><sup>1</sup> Titus Oates, Roger L’Estrange, and Popular Polemic
- Chapter 2 ‘[W]ill you have your <i>Throats cut</i> ere you will believe?’:<sup>1</sup> Popish Plot(s)
- Chapter 3 ‘Tis the Press that has made ‘um Mad’:<sup>1</sup> Publishing the Popish Plot and Exclusion Crisis
- Chapter 4 ‘A Popish priest is a certain seducer’:<sup>1</sup> Catholics and Anti-Catholicism
- Chapter 5 ‘Hell, and Rome…have long been confederate against us’:<sup>1</sup> Jesuits and Protestantism
- Chapter 6 ‘The Subduing of a Pestilent Heresy’:<sup>1</sup> Edward Coleman’s Letters
- Chapter 7 ‘A Matter too hot…to be Handled’:<sup>1</sup> The Death of Edmund Berry Godfrey
- Chapter 8 ‘A Few Words among Many, about the Touchy Point of Succession’:<sup>1</sup> The Duke of York and the Exclusion Crisis
- Chapter 9 ‘Have a Care of perverted Authorities’:<sup>1</sup> Parliament, Partisanship, and the Earl of Shaftesbury
- Chapter 10 ‘After-Birth-Inscriptions’:<sup>1</sup> Historical Disputes and the Great Fire of London
- Conclusion
- Appendix 1 Chronology of the main events mentioned in the text between August 1678 and June 1679
- Appendix 2 The Organization of the English Province of the Society of Jesus (1678–85)*
- Appendix 3 The Test Acts*
- Appendix 4
- Appendix 5 The Oath to be sworn by subscribers to the Protestant ‘Association’*
- Bibliography
- Index
‘Hell, and Rome…have long been confederate against us’:1 Jesuits and Protestantism
‘Hell, and Rome…have long been confederate against us’:1 Jesuits and Protestantism
- Chapter:
- (p.168) Chapter 5 ‘Hell, and Rome…have long been confederate against us’:1 Jesuits and Protestantism
- Source:
- ‘The Horrid Popish Plot’
- Author(s):
Peter Hinds
- Publisher:
- British Academy
This chapter discusses how Jesuits were represented and perceived in popular discourse. It looks at the significance of this perception throughout the Popish Plot. It considers in detail how the Jesuits were represented and perceived in relation to Protestant Dissent and the Church of England. This discussion reveals the importance of certain keywords, together with the battle for their appropriation and the significance of the long-term, underlying structures of anti-Catholic thought.
Keywords: Jesuits, popular discourse, Protestant Dissent, Church of England, keywords
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- Title Pages
- For my parents
- Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 ‘[T]aking up <i>Plots</i> upon <i>Trust’:</i><sup>1</sup> Titus Oates, Roger L’Estrange, and Popular Polemic
- Chapter 2 ‘[W]ill you have your <i>Throats cut</i> ere you will believe?’:<sup>1</sup> Popish Plot(s)
- Chapter 3 ‘Tis the Press that has made ‘um Mad’:<sup>1</sup> Publishing the Popish Plot and Exclusion Crisis
- Chapter 4 ‘A Popish priest is a certain seducer’:<sup>1</sup> Catholics and Anti-Catholicism
- Chapter 5 ‘Hell, and Rome…have long been confederate against us’:<sup>1</sup> Jesuits and Protestantism
- Chapter 6 ‘The Subduing of a Pestilent Heresy’:<sup>1</sup> Edward Coleman’s Letters
- Chapter 7 ‘A Matter too hot…to be Handled’:<sup>1</sup> The Death of Edmund Berry Godfrey
- Chapter 8 ‘A Few Words among Many, about the Touchy Point of Succession’:<sup>1</sup> The Duke of York and the Exclusion Crisis
- Chapter 9 ‘Have a Care of perverted Authorities’:<sup>1</sup> Parliament, Partisanship, and the Earl of Shaftesbury
- Chapter 10 ‘After-Birth-Inscriptions’:<sup>1</sup> Historical Disputes and the Great Fire of London
- Conclusion
- Appendix 1 Chronology of the main events mentioned in the text between August 1678 and June 1679
- Appendix 2 The Organization of the English Province of the Society of Jesus (1678–85)*
- Appendix 3 The Test Acts*
- Appendix 4
- Appendix 5 The Oath to be sworn by subscribers to the Protestant ‘Association’*
- Bibliography
- Index