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Biting Satire: The Lambe Speaketh (1555) and the Marian burnings

Event information>

Dates

This is a past event
Time
5:30 pm to 7:30 pm
Location

Online

Institute

Institute of Historical Research

Event type

Seminar

Event series

Religious History of Britain 1500-1800

Speakers

Adam Morton (University of Newcastle)

Contact

Email only

This paper considers the role of visual sources in public debates about the English Reformation. It focusses on a case study – The Lambe Speaketh (1555), a graphic satire on the Marian burnings – to show how visual sources contributed to public debates about religion in sixteenth century England and asks what the nature of that contribution was. Were images ‘popular’, as Robert Scribner argued was the case in Reformation Germany? Or were they intended to do more than broaden the public of a given debate? Finally, the paper considers what visual polemic like The Lambe Speaketh tells us about ongoing debates about the extent to which early modern Protestantism was iconophobic.

All welcome

– This event is free, but booking is required.


This page was last updated on 5 June 2025