Sixteenth-century English Protestant reformers were hard-pressed
to establish a historical pedigree that would provide their ideas
with weight and legitimacy. Many of those reformers turned back to
early fifteenth-century Lollard texts, recycling and reprinting
them to serve the needs, both political and spiritual, of the
burgeoning English Protestant reform movement. The anti-clerical
and reformist Lollard text, The praier and complaynte of the
ploweman vnto Christe, was one of the works used by sixteenth
century English Protestants in their struggle for religious
reform.
This is an old-spelling, critical edition of the version of The
praier and complaynte of the ploweman vnto Christe that resurfaced
in the 1530s. Demonstrating the continuity of ideas between the
Lollards and the Reformists, Douglas Parker situates The praier and
complaynte firmly in the tradition of English Reformist borrowing
of texts, and argues for William Tyndale as editor of the
sixteenth-century version of The praier and complaynte. Parker
examines the two extant copies of the manuscript, and comments on
the work's structure and reformist content. He presents full
historical, literary, and biographical information in his
introduction, and a full line-by-line commentary on the text.
This careful, meticulous work is a revealing look at the
ideology of Protestant religious struggles in England from the
fourteenth to the sixteenth century.
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