The real difference in interpretation by historians occurred in the 1970s when seeing historians looking outside. They changed from central government to rural cities and paid more attention to the role of people. Especially Steven G. Ellis and W. Stanford Reid's works will see the impact of British reforms on the British Isles and how to develop differently. Scotland forms another kind of reform thinking, but there is evidence that people are deeply involved in promoting urban reform.
Peter Marshall's heathens and believers, detailed but easy-to-read British reform reports. For reformers and traditionalists Marshall clearly shows how difficult this British history is. This is an excellent antidote for those who tend to view the 16th century as a religious fanatical and irrational age. Pagans and believers are the history of a traditional story of British religious reform. This book has successfully immersed readers of the world of thought of the 16th century and also provides an overview of the causes and consequences of decisions made by rulers. Through this process, Marshall revealed that religious reform is a process that is done in an unexpected and unpredictable way. In the early 1520s, few people opposed Luther, not Henry VIII. And in the 1520s and 1530s the reformers became traditionalists like Edward Boner in the 1540s.
In England, Henry VIII was the king of England and was an important person in the history of the British monarchy. During the majority of his rule he restrained the influence of the British Protestant Reform who cruelly had John Wycliffe and the roots in the 14th century, but he better understood his political struggle with Rome Has been done. . These struggle eventually led to the separation of the authority of the English church and the Pope, the dissolution of the monastery and the establishment of the highest leader of the English church. Henry was reported to be Protestant on the floor of his death, but he insisted on Catholic rites and teachings throughout his life. The support of the royal family of British reform began with his heirs, god Edward VI and the famous Elizabeth I. Meanwhile, Daughter Mary I restored the authority of the Pope temporarily to England. Henry also oversee England and Wales legal associations through Wales law from 1535 to 1542