Synopsis
From its outset in the 1650s, the Quaker movement made extensive use of the printing press in spreading its message. This book explores how and why early Quaker leaders used printed tracts in their campaign. It reveals how the tracts were produced, distributed, and read, as well as their role in the Quakers’ dynamic campaign for religious and political liberty under the republican rule of Oliver Cromwell.
Part of the publisher’s “Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History” series.