Katherine Parr

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Standard Name: Parr, Katherine
Birth Name: Katherine Parr
Pseudonym: K. P.
Married Name: Katherine Borough
Married Name: Katherine Neville
Titled: Katherine Neville, Lady Latimer
Royal Name: Queen Katherine
Used Form: Catherine Parr
KP 's interventions in national and ecclesiastical history in the earlier sixteenth century, at the time of the Reformation (which were more far-reaching than has often been recognised), rested on her skill in writing and her faith in the educational power of reading. She produced (besides letters) religious writings: prayers and meditations.

Connections

Connections Author name Sort ascending Excerpt
politics Elizabeth Oxenbridge, Lady Tyrwhit
Lady Tyrwhit's fervent Protestantism was, at this date, a highly politicized position. She and her group of court ladies were hounded by highly-placed religious traditionalists, enemies of Katherine Parr , since the queen was well...
Textual Production Queen Elizabeth I
The precocious child who would one day be QEI wrote her earliest surviving letter, in Italian, to her stepmother Katherine Parr .
Elizabeth I, Queen. Elizabeth I: Collected Works. Editors Marcus, Leah S. et al., University of Chicago Press.
5-6
Textual Production Queen Elizabeth I
Princess Elizabeth (later QEI ) sent Katherine Parr a New Year's gift: a manuscript translation she had done of The Mirrour or Glasse of the Sinful Soul
Neale, J. E. Queen Elizabeth. J. Cape.
23
by Marguerite de Navarre (whom she does...
Textual Production Queen Elizabeth I
Princess Elizabeth (later QEI ) sent her father a New Year's gift: her translation of Katherine Parr 's Prayers or Meditacions into three languages: Latin, French and Italian.
Collinson, Patrick. “Little Bastard”. London Review of Books, pp. 17-18.
17
Cultural formation Queen Elizabeth I
Brought up both by her teachers and by Katherine Parr in evangelical Protestantism, she developed into a pragmatic Anglican , probably both by conviction and by informed political choice. She exercised her diplomatic skills to...
Education Queen Elizabeth I
Elizabeth was given a full Renaissance education, latterly under the supervision of her stepmother Katherine Parr . The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, however, insists on the importance in her life of the upper-class...
Intertextuality and Influence Queen Elizabeth I
The style is elaborate and heavily ornamented. It was probably inspired by Katherine Parr 's own The Lamentacion of a Synner.
Neale, J. E. Queen Elizabeth. J. Cape.
23-4
Marc Shell traces the influence on Marguerite de Navarre of a tradition...
Reception Mary Astell
Astell's late twentieth-century reputation as a feminist foremother led to a biography by Ruth Perry (1986), a one-volume selection of her work edited by Bridget Hill (The First English Feminist, 1986), and editions...
Friends, Associates Anne Askew
AA was associated in these activities with Queen Katherine Parr ; this contributed to her persecution. Authorities hoped to incriminate the queen through AA .
Wilson, Derek. A Tudor Tapestry: Men, Women and Society in Reformation England. Heinemann.
182
Beilin, Elaine V., and Anne Askew. “Introduction”. The Examinations of Anne Askew, Oxford University Press.
xxvii

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Texts

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