Oxford Handbooks Online 2013
DOI: 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199580682.013.0032
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The Style of Authorship in John Foxe's Acts and Monuments

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“…Foxe's interest in Church history also led him to ponder over the method of Eusebius of Caesarea and to follow in the ecclesiastical historian's footsteps (Minton 2002). The martyrologist's own methodology -his inclusion of primary material, such as the records of ecclesiastical courts, the letters of martyrs or the testimonies which came his way thanks to the clandestine Protestant networksraises the question of Foxe's "style of authorship" (Freeman & Brietz Monta 2013) and advises us to be cautious about the possible limits of the martyrologist's auctoritas.…”
Section: Angles 10 | 2020mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Foxe's interest in Church history also led him to ponder over the method of Eusebius of Caesarea and to follow in the ecclesiastical historian's footsteps (Minton 2002). The martyrologist's own methodology -his inclusion of primary material, such as the records of ecclesiastical courts, the letters of martyrs or the testimonies which came his way thanks to the clandestine Protestant networksraises the question of Foxe's "style of authorship" (Freeman & Brietz Monta 2013) and advises us to be cautious about the possible limits of the martyrologist's auctoritas.…”
Section: Angles 10 | 2020mentioning
confidence: 99%