In the reign of James II, minority groups from across the
religious spectrum, led by the Quaker William Penn, rallied
together under the Catholic King James in an effort to bring
religious toleration to England. Known as repealers, these
reformers aimed to convince Parliament to repeal laws that
penalized worshippers who failed to conform to the doctrines of the
Church of England. Although the movement was destroyed by the
Glorious Revolution, it profoundly influenced the
post-revolutionary settlement, helping to develop the ideals of
tolerance that would define the European Enlightenment.
Based on a rich array of newly discovered archival sources,
Scott Sowerby s groundbreaking history rescues the repealers from
undeserved obscurity, telling the forgotten story of men and women
who stood up for their beliefs at a formative moment in British
history. By restoring the repealer movement to its rightful
prominence, "Making Toleration" also overturns traditional
interpretations of King James II s reign and the origins of the
Glorious Revolution. Though often depicted as a despot who sought
to impose his own Catholic faith on a Protestant people, James is
revealed as a man ahead of his time, a king who pressed for
religious toleration at the expense of his throne. The Glorious
Revolution, Sowerby finds, was not primarily a crisis provoked by
political repression. It was, in fact, a conservative
counter-revolution against the movement for enlightened reform that
James himself encouraged and sustained."
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