(Request from Chris Williams: “Levellers, diggers, ranters, quakers, antinomians, socinians, fifth monarchy men and baptists, please. Lilburne, Overton, Walwyn, Winstanley, Coppe . . . even Thomas Tany. Possibly.” So let’s see how far we can get…)
For a list of more general Civil Wars/Revolution related links, go to EMR: Politics, rebellions, revolutions
The English Revolution
Civil Wars of Ideas
The World Turned Upside Down
British Civil Wars, Commonwealth and Protectorate 1638-1660
English dissenters (Adamites, Anabaptists, Baptists, Barrowists, Behmenists, Brownists, Diggers, Familists, Fifth Monarchists, Free-will Men, Grindletonians, Jacobites, Levellers, Lollards, Muggletonians, Puritans, Quakers, Ranters, Sabbatarians, Seekers, Socinians. I could almost stop right here…)
Writing, radicalism and the dominant culture
THe Putney debates
Radical women during the English Revolution
The Solemn League and Covenant
An Agreement of the People
The Levellers: Libertarian Radicalism and the English Civil War
The Levellers: chronology and bibliography
Statement of the Levellers
The Just Defence of John Lilburne
Selected works of the Levellers (John Lilburne, William Walwyn, Thomas Prince, Richard Overton)
Levellers and Diggers reading list
Winstanley (1975)
The True Levellers’ Standard Advanced
The English Diggers 1649-50
Gerard Winstanley: 17th-century communist
The religion of Gerrard Winstanley
Digger writings
Winstanley and the Diggers 1649-1999 (book review)
“A fiery flying roll”, Abiezer Coppe and the Ranters
Ranters run amok (book review)
The Antinomians and Blake
Antinomians redeemed
Revising Anne: histories of Hutchinson and the Antinomians
Autobiography of Lodowick Muggleton (review)
Quaker online texts
George Fox’s autobiography
Quaker women
Baptist Confessions of Faith
Gender and ecclesiology amongst early English Baptists
Baptists historical relation to the Protestant reformation
Early English Baptists
Influence of Calvinism on seventeenth-century English Baptists
Baptists and religious liberty in early Connecticut
The sixteenth-century apocalypse: the Fifth Monarchists (title notwithstanding, seems to refer to the 17th century…)
Fifth Monarchy Men guide
Milton Reading Room
Milton-L homepage
Selected political works of Milton
….
Not much luck with Thomas Tany though (beyond passing mentions).
One comment on “Christmas requests: 17th-century troublemakers”
Cheers, Sharon. Nice one.
By the way, lots of this stuff came out with Aporia Press in the 1980s and 1990s, edited by Andrew Hopton.