王国的防御之墙":伊丽莎白早期英格兰的威廉-塞西尔、一致性和新教国家

Alexandra Gajda
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摘要

本文通过威廉-塞西尔(William Cecil)的国家改革计划,重新评估了 15 世纪 60 年代要求治安官遵守宗教的观念。学者们认为,"王室 "界定臣民的宗教一致性的目的是 "政治性的 "而非 "福音性的",主要侧重于确保服从。本文则认为,主要的新教徒,包括教士和非教士,都将建立基督教的大同世界视为牧师和行政官的共同事业。在私人备忘录中,塞西尔坚持认为政体的安全取决于拥有 "内在的 "新教 "灵魂 "的地方长官。塞西尔最早的 "结社文书 "计划就是在这一时期制定的,他认为新教政体不是由有德行的公民组成的 "君主共和国",而是由忠于王室和教会的官员网络管理的 "忏悔国家"。文章最后分析了枢密院为确保地方行政机构更严格遵守宗教教规所做的努力。1569 年 11 月,王国各地的地方官员被迫签署《统一法》,并承诺定期参加圣餐礼。新教政权要求其公职人员更严格地遵守宗教信仰的愿望表明,"遵守 "本身是一个模糊的概念,可以在不同的时间和地点通过不同的手段强加给目标群体。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘A Wall of Defence unto this Realm’: William Cecil, Conformity and the Protestant State in Early Elizabethan England
This article reassesses conceptions of the religious conformity required of public magistrates in the 1560s through the prism of William Cecil’s schemes for reformation of the state. Scholars have argued that ‘the Crown’s’ aims in defining the conformity of subjects were ‘political’ rather than ‘evangelical’ and primarily focused on securing obedience. This article argues instead that leading Protestants, clerical and lay, viewed the creation of the Christian commonwealth as a joint enterprise of minister and magistrate. In private memoranda, Cecil insisted that the security of the polity was dependent on magistrates who possessed ‘inward’ Protestantism ‘of the hart’. Cecil’s earliest scheme for an ‘Instrument of Association’ binding the Protestant elite, was devised in this period, fuelled by his vision of the Protestant polity not as ‘monarchical republic’ of virtuous citizens, but a ‘confessional state’ governed by a network of officials bound by loyalty to Crown and church. The article concludes by analysing the Privy Council’s attempts to secure the closer conformity of the magistracy to the religious settlement by subscription. In November 1569, local officials across the realm were compelled to subscribe to the Act of Uniformity and to promise to take the eucharist on a regular basis, a sacramental requirement not required of officials by statute law until the Restoration. The aspiration of the Protestant regime to require stricter religious conformity of its public officials indicates that ‘conformity’ itself was a nebulous concept, which could be imposed on targeted groups at different times and places and through variant means.
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