Foxe's Book of Martyrs Vol 2, A History of the Lives, Sufferings, and Triumphant Deaths of the Early Christian and the Protestant Martyrs

Foxe's Book of Martyrs Vol 2, A History of the Lives, Sufferings, and Triumphant Deaths of the Early Christian and the Protestant Martyrs

by William Byron Forbush, John Foxe

23 chapters9h 31mEnglish1916

About this book

The Book of Martyrs, by John Foxe, is an English Protestant account of the persecutions of Protestants, many of whom had died for their beliefs within the decade immediately preceding its first publication. It was first published by John Day, in 1563. Lavishly illustrated with many woodcuts, it was the largest publishing project undertaken in Britain up to that time. Commonly known as, "Foxe's Book of Martyrs", the work's full title begins with "Actes and Monuments of these Latter and Perillous Days, Touching Matters of the Church." There were many subsequent editions, by Day, and by other editors down through the years. Foxe's original work was enormous (the second edition filling two heavy folio volumes with a total of 2,300 pages, estimated to be twice as long as Edward Gibbon's "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire." This edition is much abridged from Foxe's original. This book was first published shortly after the death of Queen Mary. During Mary's reign, common people of Protestant Christian faith were publicly burned at the stake in an attempt to eliminate dissension from Catholic doctrines. Foxe's account of Mary's reign and its martyrdoms form a significant part of the work. Foxe intended to justify the foundation of the Church of England as a continuation of the true and faithful ancient church, rather than as a new denomination. The work has a historic perspective. It begins with early Christian martyrs, and continues with the Inquisition, Wycliffe, and the Marian Persecutions. For the English Church, Foxe's book remains a fundamental witness to the sufferings of faithful Christian people at the hands of the anti-Protestant Roman Catholic authorities, and to the miracle of their endurance unto death. Roman Catholics often view Foxe's record of this period as extremely partisan and the primary propaganda piece for English anti-Catholicism. Among other objections, the accuracy of Foxe's claims regarding martyrdoms under Mary ignore the mingled political and religious aspects of the time period. Some of the victims may have been intent on removing Mary from the throne. Although the work is more accurate when dealing with events during Foxe's time, it is generally not a correct or impartial account of the period, and includes occasional "willful falsification of evidence" (Summary abridged from Wikipedia by Karen Merline)Foxes' Book of Martyrs, Vol 1

Chapters (23)

1Ch. 15
1707
2Ch. 16, pt. 1
1219
3Ch. 16, pt. 2
1867
4Ch. 16, pt. 3
1782
5Ch. 16, pt. 4
1739
6Ch. 16, pt. 5
1339
7Ch. 16, pt. 6
1486
8Ch. 16, pt. 7
1274
9Ch. 16, pt. 8
1463
10Ch. 16, pt. 9
1766
11Ch. 16, pt. 10
1403
12Ch. 16, pt. 11
1470
13Ch. 16, pt. 12
2078
14Ch. 17, pt. 1
1704
15Ch. 17, pt. 3
1361
16Ch. 18
2517
17Ch. 19
452
18Ch. 20
502
19Ch. 21, pt. 1
1694
20Ch. 21, pt. 2
1565
21Ch. 22, pt. 1
1267
22Ch. 22, pt. 2
1300
23Ch. 22, pt. 3
1357

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