Long Reformation: Difference between revisions

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”’Long Reformation”’ is a [[historiographic]] term that interprets the process of the [[Protestant Reformation]] as [[Longue durée|longer]]{{sfn|Loewenstein|2020|p=36}} and broader than its traditional chronology of the mid-sixteenth-century.{{sfn|Tyacke|2003|p=1}} The term is used in works that describe an extended process of religious, cultural and social change in [[Europe]] from the late medieval period through to as late as the [[eighteenth century]].{{sfn|Taylor|2025|p=103}}

”’Long Reformation”’ is a [[historiographic]] term that interprets the process of the [[Protestant Reformation]] as [[Longue durée|longer]]{{sfn|Loewenstein|2020|p=36}} and broader than its traditional chronology of the mid-sixteenth-century.{{sfn|Tyacke|2003|p=1}} The term is used in works that describe an extended process of religious, cultural and social change in [[Europe]] from the late medieval period through to as late as the [[eighteenth century]].{{sfn|Taylor|2025|p=103}}

The term was first used in print in 1996 by [[Eamon Duffy]].<ref>Lecture reprinted as {{harv|Duffy|2003}}</ref>

==References==

==References==


Revision as of 08:48, 27 September 2025

Long Reformation is a historiographic term that interprets the process of the Protestant Reformation as longer and broader than its traditional chronology of the mid-sixteenth-century. The term was first used in 1996 by Eamon Duffy.[4] and is used in works that describe an extended process of religious, cultural and social change in Europe from the late medieval period through to as late as the eighteenth century.

References

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