Abstract

Trained, and unusually well versed in civil and common law, barrister-MP and judge Sir James Whitelocke (1570–1632) held a theological outlook which defies easy classification. Friend and colleague of noteworthy players in ‘church controversies’ — players ranging from Sir Edward Coke to William Laud — Whitelocke offers insights on the realities of public and private worship in early Stuart England.

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