Introduction 1. 'Handmaid' of the English church: the diocese of Dublin on the eve of the Reformation 2. 'Faithful Catholics of the English nation': patriotism, canon law and the corporate clergy 3. Rebellion and supremacy: Archbishop Browne, clerical opposition and the enforcement of the early Reformation, 1534-40 4. 'God's laws and ours together': Archbishop Browne, political reform and the emergence of a new religious settlement, 1540-2 5. The rise and fall of the Viceroy's settlement: property, canon law and politics during the St Leger era, 1542-53 6. Archbishop Dowdall and the restoration of Catholicism in Dublin, 1553-5 7. Rejuvenation and survival: the old religion during the episcopacy of Hugh Curwen, 1555-67 8. Archbishop Loftus and the drive to protestantise Dublin, 1567-90 Afterword Appendix I. The division of administrative responsibilities between the two Dublin cathedrals Appendix II. The parishes of the diocese of Dublin, 1530-1600.
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