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All Outputs (9)

Sermons and Preaching (2020)
Book Chapter
Appleby, D. (2020). Sermons and Preaching. In J. Coffey (Ed.), The Oxford History of Protestant Dissenting Traditions: Volume I: The Post-Reformation Era, 1559-1689. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198702238.001.0001

Preaching has always been central to the dissenting Protestant tradition. The fact that sermons were a crucial means of mass communication ensured that ‘hotter Protestants’ would be locked in a perpetual struggle with the ecclesiastical and political... Read More about Sermons and Preaching.

Fleshing out a massacre: the storming of Shelford House and social forgetting in Restoration England (2020)
Journal Article
APPLEBY, D. (2020). Fleshing out a massacre: the storming of Shelford House and social forgetting in Restoration England. Historical Research, 93(260), 286-308. https://doi.org/10.1093/hisres/htaa011

Restoration scholars have embraced the relationship between social memory and social forgetting, although the resulting dialectic has invariably been presented as a contest between the Cavalier-Anglican establishment and the remnants of Puritanism.... Read More about Fleshing out a massacre: the storming of Shelford House and social forgetting in Restoration England.

The Restoration county community: a post-conflict culture (2012)
Book Chapter
Appleby, D. (2012). The Restoration county community: a post-conflict culture. In J. Eales, & A. Hopper (Eds.), The County Community in Seventeenth-century England and Wales. , (100-124). University of Hertfordshire Press

Issues of audience and reception in Restoration preaching (2006)
Book Chapter
Appleby, D. (2006). Issues of audience and reception in Restoration preaching. In G. Baker, & A. McGruer (Eds.), Readers, Audiences and Coteries in Early Modern England. , (10-27). Newcastle, England: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Combination and control: Cultural politics in the management of friendly societies in nineteenth-century Essex and Suffolk (2002)
Journal Article
Appleby, D. J. (2002). Combination and control: Cultural politics in the management of friendly societies in nineteenth-century Essex and Suffolk. Essex Archaeology and History : Transactions of the Essex Society for Archaeology and History, 3rd Series Vol. 33 (2002), 323-332

The records concerning nineteenth-century friendly societies contain such an immense volume of detailed and often intimate information that the unsuspecting researcher could easily be overwhelmed by the sheer weight of evidence. This is particularly... Read More about Combination and control: Cultural politics in the management of friendly societies in nineteenth-century Essex and Suffolk.