Abstract
Already at the beginning of her reign Elizabeth I was resolved to effect at the earliest
opportunity both the restoration of the Royal Supremacy and the replacement of the Latin liturgy by
an existing Edwardian Prayer Book. Constrained by Marian legislation which she was firmly minded
not to break, the queen signalled her intentions by conspicuous adoption in her Chapel Royal of such
few and minor manifestations of Protestant liturgy and practice as fortuitously were still legitimate,
amplified by certain early Edwardian practices (1547–9) originally introduced not by statute but by
proclamation or injunction and therefore never formally de-legitimated by statutory repeal. That her
initial intention was restoration of the Prayer Book of 1549 is indicated by the identity of certain texts
set to music early in 1559 by her Chapel Royal composers, and by the response of Edmund Guest to
a contemporary request that he undertake a revision of parts of the 1549 Book. Arising from her own
personal convictions, Elizabeth's policy was not without merits; however, political pragmatism and
ecclesiastical realities coerced her into agreeing instead to the restoration of the Book of 1552. She
exacted a number of concessions to her own conservatism ; first discernible in the instructions given to
Guest, these achieved their realization through the rubrics of the 1559 Prayer Book and certain of the
1559 Injunctions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
47 articles.
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