Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Nicole Greenspan

Front page of Transactions article: 'Louis XIV’s Attitude to the Chinese Rites Controversy', by Sean Heath.

Full abstract: 'Although Louis XIV’s sponsorship of a French Jesuit presence in China is well known, his attitude to the major dispute over the Chinese rites which engulfed the mission has been barely explored. This article shows that, as the Chinese Rites Controversy reached its peak in Paris and Rome in the years around 1700, Louis XIV’s response was surprisingly inconsistent, reflecting the fact that the two groups of missionaries whose work in east Asia he had supported – the Missions étrangères de Paris (MEP) and the French Jesuits – were pitted against one another. Furthermore, the king’s somewhat contradictory interventions were due to the opposing directions in which his chief advisers on ecclesiastical matters pushed him: his confessor La Chaise towards support of the Jesuits, and his wife Madame de Maintenon and Archbishop Noailles of Paris towards helping the MEP. In the end, Louis decided not to wield his influence in Rome in favour of one side or the other, but to leave the decision to the Holy See while prohibiting publication on the ‘Chinese affair’ in France. In doing so, the article offers an exploration of ecclesiastical policy in the making under the Sun King.'

Front page of Transactions article: 'Louis XIV’s Attitude to the Chinese Rites Controversy', by Sean Heath. Full abstract: 'Although Louis XIV’s sponsorship of a French Jesuit presence in China is well known, his attitude to the major dispute over the Chinese rites which engulfed the mission has been barely explored. This article shows that, as the Chinese Rites Controversy reached its peak in Paris and Rome in the years around 1700, Louis XIV’s response was surprisingly inconsistent, reflecting the fact that the two groups of missionaries whose work in east Asia he had supported – the Missions étrangères de Paris (MEP) and the French Jesuits – were pitted against one another. Furthermore, the king’s somewhat contradictory interventions were due to the opposing directions in which his chief advisers on ecclesiastical matters pushed him: his confessor La Chaise towards support of the Jesuits, and his wife Madame de Maintenon and Archbishop Noailles of Paris towards helping the MEP. In the end, Louis decided not to wield his influence in Rome in favour of one side or the other, but to leave the decision to the Holy See while prohibiting publication on the ‘Chinese affair’ in France. In doing so, the article offers an exploration of ecclesiastical policy in the making under the Sun King.'

New article in 'Transactions of the Royal Historical Society'.

'Louis XIV’s Attitude to the Chinese Rites Controversy': bit.ly/47NYgmk

Dr Sean Heath offers an exploration of ecclesiastical policy in the making under the Sun King. Sean's article is now freely available Open Access #Skystorians 1/2

2 weeks ago 35 21 1 2

#earlymodern

2 weeks ago 7 3 0 0
Preview
Selling Education in England, 1650–1715* Abstract. In the period 1650–1715, a growing consensus emerged that educational culture in England did not meet the needs of the population, and that chang

My new article, 'Selling Education in England, 1650-1715' is now out (open access) in the English Historical Review! academic.oup.com/ehr/advance-...

2 months ago 132 47 4 3
Preview
When No Single Power Held Hegemony: Thomas Bowrey’s Account of Bay of Bengal (1669-1679) | MEMOs Thomas Bowrey’s account of Bay of Bengal (1669-1679) serves as a vital record of a global order that was interconnected yet decentralised hegemonically.

In today's new blog, Dr. Nia Deliana and Dr. Mehmet Ozay offer insights into how Thomas Bowrey’s account of Bay of Bengal (1669-1679) serves as a record of a global order that was interconnected yet decentralised hegemonically. Read it here:

memorients.com/articles/whe...

1 month ago 9 7 0 1
Green-blue-grey blocky soundwaves on background. Centred in black serif lettering “Sonance”, with “journal of early modern sound studies” underneath.

Green-blue-grey blocky soundwaves on background. Centred in black serif lettering “Sonance”, with “journal of early modern sound studies” underneath.

👀 Over the last few months, I’ve been working with the terrific triumvirate @spparkle.bsky.social, @emiliekmmurphy.bsky.social & Hannah Yip to set up “Sonance: A Journal of Early Modern Sound Studies”, a diamond open access journal dedicated to historic sounds in all their wondrous & eclectic forms.

1 month ago 121 60 14 9
Perspectives on Cultural History — CEU Press Author Hub

Delighted to announce this new book series, "Perspectives on Cultural History," with CEU for Amsterdam University Press. For more information, see here. Proposals should be sent to the commissioning editor.

www.ceupressauthorhub.com/perspectives...

1 month ago 23 10 0 0

It’s worth writing to them to inquire. I’ve had wonderful experiences with extremely generous library staff who have helped me access copies and scans when I’ve been countries and continents away.

3 months ago 5 0 0 0
17th-century ballad about the Great Fire of London

17th-century ballad about the Great Fire of London

Happy to share my glowing review of the 100Ballads.org site, which has just been published in Early Modern Digital Review: jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/em...
It's a fantastic site for anyone interested in early modern English ballads. Check it out!

3 months ago 48 18 0 0
Preview
The Ritual of Death in the Early Modern Period, 1550-1650 Discover how rituals of death between 1550 and 1650 reflected religion, culture, and society in the early modern world.

From 1550–1650, death was a carefully crafted ritual — faith, culture, and memory woven together. ⚰️✨

Discover how early modern society understood dying.

#History #EarlyModern #Brewminate

6 months ago 4 3 0 0


This book applies the innovative work-task approach to the history of work, which captures the contribution of all workers and types of work to the early modern economy. Drawing on tens of thousands of court depositions, the authors analyse the individual tasks that made up everyday work for women and men, shedding new light on the gender division of labour, and the ways in which time, space, age and marital status shaped sixteenth and seventeenth-century working life. Combining qualitative and quantitative analysis, the book deepens our understanding of the preindustrial economy, and calls for us to rethink not only who did what, but also the implications of these findings for major debates about structural change, the nature and extent of paid work, and what has been lost as well as gained over the past three centuries of economic development. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.

This book applies the innovative work-task approach to the history of work, which captures the contribution of all workers and types of work to the early modern economy. Drawing on tens of thousands of court depositions, the authors analyse the individual tasks that made up everyday work for women and men, shedding new light on the gender division of labour, and the ways in which time, space, age and marital status shaped sixteenth and seventeenth-century working life. Combining qualitative and quantitative analysis, the book deepens our understanding of the preindustrial economy, and calls for us to rethink not only who did what, but also the implications of these findings for major debates about structural change, the nature and extent of paid work, and what has been lost as well as gained over the past three centuries of economic development. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.

Cover of Whittle, Jane, Mark Hailwood, Hannah Robb, and Taylor Aucoin. The Experience of Work in Early Modern England. of Cambridge Studies in Economic History - Second Series. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2025.

Cover of Whittle, Jane, Mark Hailwood, Hannah Robb, and Taylor Aucoin. The Experience of Work in Early Modern England. of Cambridge Studies in Economic History - Second Series. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2025.

Who did what in early modern England?

New #OpenAccess book, 'The Experience of Work in Early Modern England' by @jwhittle.bsky.social, @markhailwood.bsky.social, @hkrobb.bsky.social & @aucointaylor.bsky.social, based on thousands of #EarlyModern court depositions 🗃️

Read it: doi.org/10.1017/9781...

6 months ago 139 71 1 7
Advertisement

Excellent to see this call for papers for a conference bridging the gap between military, political, social & cultural approaches to conflict, war and violence in the #EarlyModern world. 🗃️

👇

9 months ago 15 10 0 0
Post image Post image

My new article 'The Politics of Colonial Lists' just published in Comparative Studies in Society and History @csshjournal.bsky.social
And it is open access! www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

9 months ago 77 28 4 3
Post image

Hoorah!!! A new book of essays in honour of Bernard Capp, courtesy of @boydellandbrewer.bsky.social !

10 months ago 40 9 3 0

My article "Seasonal Harvests: Migration, Reproduction, and Religion in the Early Modern Spanish Tuna Fisheries" is now available online in advance of the July issue of
@envirohistory.bsky.social. The essay reflects years of work and revision; I'm so grateful for the help I got along the way.

10 months ago 31 7 1 1
Preview
Tales from the Green Benches: Live Podcast Join the History of Parliament for a live recording of our podcast 'Tales from the Green Benches: an Oral History of Parliament'.

#ICYMI on 4 June we'll be in Parliament recording a special live episode of our podcast, 'Tales from the Green Benches'!

Emma & Alex will be joined by some special guests to talk all about political interviewing- and you can join us too! Get your ticket here:
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/tales-from...

10 months ago 4 4 0 0
The Scholarly Business of Corporations and Slavery: Political Fault Lines of the Economic History of Empire | Journal of British Studies | Cambridge Core The Scholarly Business of Corporations and Slavery: Political Fault Lines of the Economic History of Empire - Volume 64

📢New article out now in JBS!

📗"The Scholarly Business of Corporations and Slavery: Political Fault Lines of the Economic History of Empire," by Priya Satia

Open access here: www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

10 months ago 5 4 0 1
Post image

My new article on pauper apprenticeship is online and open access!

Bound to the soil (Part I): the origins of compulsory apprenticeship schemes in South-West rural England c.1670–1750

doi.org/10.1017/S026...

10 months ago 31 8 3 2
The call poster. Follow the link for details.

The call poster. Follow the link for details.

Call! In September we will host "Providence, Propaganda, & Profit in the Early Modern English World" at UTokyo. Keynotes: @annlaurahughes.bsky.social, Shusaku Kanazawa, Keiko Kawawake, & Peter Lake. Deadline: 15 July!
See politicaleconomyseminar.wordpress.com/2025/05/17/%... @kyamamoto.bsky.social

11 months ago 27 19 1 4
Colonialism, Governance, and Fisheries: Perspectives from Lake Malawi | The Journal of African History | Cambridge Core Colonialism, Governance, and Fisheries: Perspectives from Lake Malawi - Volume 66

‼️🐠 Our short “History Matters” piece — “Colonialism, Governance, and Fisheries: Perspectives from Lake Malawi” just published OA in The Journal of African History!

doi.org/10.1017/S002...

A lengthier piece expanding on fisheries surveys & colonial development in L. Malawi coming soon in Isis… 🐠‼️

10 months ago 6 4 2 0
Advertisement

This time? While in custody on another charge of forgery, he forged none other than the Lord Mayor of London's signature and seal... for his own discharge.

10 months ago 0 0 0 0

#FlashbackFriday to February 1655, when Arthur Stanhope, already known for forging the Earl of Warwick’s handwriting and getting a stint in the pillory for it, gave it another go.

10 months ago 0 0 1 0
Black and white cartoon shows a historian reminiscent of NZ Davis flipping through books. The text reads “She made up a fact.” To which the historian replies “I did no such thing. I offered a “possible truth.”’

Black and white cartoon shows a historian reminiscent of NZ Davis flipping through books. The text reads “She made up a fact.” To which the historian replies “I did no such thing. I offered a “possible truth.”’

how can a comic be historiographical? how do images as well as words make arguments?

v excited to see that our visual introduction to the forthcoming special issue of ‘rethinking history’ on visual histories is now up online 🗃️

doi.org/10.1080/1364...

10 months ago 47 14 2 1
Cover of the current issue of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, sitting on a speckled windowsill.

Cover of the current issue of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, sitting on a speckled windowsill.

The journal opened to the first page of my article in paper form.

The journal opened to the first page of my article in paper form.

Delightful work post — the hard copy of the new issue of Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, featuring my article, 'Migrant Voices in Multilingual London, 1560-1600'.

1 year ago 102 10 2 1

Announcement on the move of the ESTC to CERL:

www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/wa-j...

However, nothing on copyright of licensing in this statement.

#History #DigitalHistory #BookHistory

11 months ago 2 1 0 0

WOW!!!!! the ESTC is back!!! Amazing biblio of early modern printed books in English/printed in English-speaking places, up to 1801. I've missed you, old friend! (it went down when BL was cyber-hacked). Gonna get grading done and...

11 months ago 4 1 0 0
Validate User

New article!

'Seeing Women in the Early English and Dutch East India Companies' is now available as an Advance Article with Historical Research.

It's been years of work, but I'm proud of this one. I hope #earlymodern #skystorians enjoy it!

Some context below:

academic.oup.com/histres/adva...

11 months ago 167 54 9 7
Advertisement
an embroidered script letter F from a sampler

an embroidered script letter F from a sampler

Latest Substack dropped today, a story of abortion during the American Civil War. Subscribe here: maryfissell.substack.com

11 months ago 5 1 0 0
Preview
An Unsettled Religious Settlement and the Crisis of the 1620s: English Catholics, Anti-Popery, and the Spanish Match, 1622–4* Abstract. The anti-popish fervour that accompanied the collapse of the Spanish Match has been long acknowledged both by the wave of revisionists who dismis

Interested in the relationship between anti-popery in the 1624 parliament and "real" Catholic activity? Check out my new article in the English Historical Review, now available with advance access!
doi.org/10.1093/ehr/...

1 year ago 15 7 1 0
Post image

Our Subversive Voice is a groundbreaking study of English protest song that spans five centuries.

Out now! buff.ly/cHmMcmv

Check out this playlist of protest songs featured in the book: buff.ly/h9biJdZ

Read a guest blog post by co-author John Street: buff.ly/xrR7KfC

1 year ago 8 5 0 2