Abstract

AbstractDuring the late twentieth century, scholars became interested in the ways in which early modern England adapted to the Reformation and how change was represented in popular culture. In the last fifteen years, there has been a particular focus on how Protestantism affected the relationship between the living and the dead. In 2000, for example, Ralph Houlbrooke's studyDeath,Religion,and the Family in England,1480–1750identified a failure on the part of the post‐Reformation church to replace old funerary customs with new, yet two years later inBeliefs and the Dead in Reformation England, Peter Marshall argued persuasively that the Reformation engendered a ‘cultural transformation’ in the understanding of both death and the dead. By, Scott Newstok'sQuoting Death in Early Modern Englanddescribed a paradox in which a Protestant nation that scorned Catholic death rituals became engrossed in commemorating its own dead through poetic memorialisation.This article surveys 21st century historiographical debates in order to contextualise women's verse epitaphs during the sixteenth century. In particular, it looks to the broadside literature that was the epitome of cheap print as a means of reflecting popular religious attitudes. It shows how several verse epitaphs of prominent women in Tudor society, such as William Elderton'sA proper new balad in praise of my ladie marques(), highlight issues of continuity and change in religious beliefs surrounding the memorialisation of pious women and the role of the supernatural.Video abstract (click to view)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oyzjk8AaCP8

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