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Publications (to October 2015)

a) In Print:

Books:

1. J (Associate Editor), The Hamlyn (Newnes) Historical Atlas (1981) 25,000 words of text plus 15 maps contributed by M. Greengrass, (Hamlyn, 1981), pp. 176. Also published with minor variations as: The Rand McNally Historical Atlas of the World (Chicago, 1982), the Atlas Historique Nathan (Paris, 1982), the Historia Universal: Atlas Historica (Barcelona, 1982), the Forums Historiske Atlas (Stockholm, 1983), the Newnes Historical Atlas (London, Edward Arnold, 1983), the Historia Universal: Atlas Historico (Lisbon, 1984), and in Japanese by Shoseki (Tokyo, 1982). The atlas has also been republished with revisions as the Philips Historical Atlas (1993).

2. J G.R. Potter and M. Greengrass, John Calvin (Edward Arnold, Documents in Modern History Series ed. A.G. Dickens, 1983), viii + 176 pp + map. (Also published in US edition).

3. France in the Age of Henri IV: the struggle for stability (Longman, 1984), xii + 237 pp. including 6 figures.

Ibid., Second Edition (1994), xiii + 308 pp including 9 figures.

4.

French Reformation (Blackwell, 1987), 88 pp + map.

5. J M. Greengrass (ed), Conquest and Coalescence: the shaping of the State in Early Modern Europe (Edward Arnold, 1991), viii + 200 pp. [introduction, pp. 124; 6 maps; and part of the translation for chapter nine by M. Greengrass].

6. J C.F. Black, Mark Greengrass, David Howarth, Jeremy Lawrance, Richard Mackenney, Martin Rady and Evelyn Welch (eds), Cultural Atlas of the Renaissance (Cassell, 1993), 240 pp. An American edition has also been published by

Prentice Hall; translations in French and Spanish are also published. The work includes a chapter on “France” by M. Greengrass (pp. 164-183).

7. J M. Greengrass, M.P. Leslie and T. Raylor (eds) Samuel Hartlib and Universal Reformation. Studies in Intellectual Communication (Cambridge U.P., 1994), xix + 372 pp. This includes the “Introduction”, written by the editors.

8. J M. J. Braddick and M. Greengrass (eds) The Letters of Sir Cheney Culpeper, 1641-1657 (Royal Historical Society Camden Series, Vol VII, 1999), pp. 122-400.

9. The Longman Companion to the European Reformation, c.1500-1618 (London, Longman, 1998), pp. vii + 398.

10. J Keith Cameron, Mark Greengrass and Penny Roberts (eds), The Adventure of Religious Pluralism in Early Modern France (Oxford, Peter Lang, 2000), pp. 322. This includes a chapter (‘Pluralism and Equality: The Peace of Monsieur, May 1576’: pp. 45-63) and an epilogue (pp. 305-317) written by the author. [Reviews of the book in Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of Great Britain 27.2 (2002) [Andrew Pettegree]; and Journal of Ecclesiastical History 53.2 (2002)].

11. Governing Passions: Peace and Reform in The French Kingdom, 1576-1585 (Oxford: Oxford U.P., 2007), pp. xvi + 423.

12.J [edited, with Lorna Hughes] The Virtual Representation of the Past (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2008), pp. ix + 221. Reviewed in ‘Reviews in History’ (online at http://www.history.ac.uk/reviews/paper/blaneyj.html).

13.J [edited with Scott Dixon and Dagmar Freist] Living with Religious Diversity in Early Modern Europe (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2009) – ISBN: 978-06668-4 - papers from a conference in Oldenburg, September 2007. Includes ‘Afteword, living with religious diversity’, pp. 281-295.

14

Christendom Destroyed. Europe 15171648. Penguin History of Europe, Vol. V. (London: Allen Lane, 2014) - ISBN: 978-0-713-99086-7, pp. xxix + 722; (New York, Viking, 2014); (Chinese trans., in prog.).

Annual Bibliographies:

15. J (i) G. Benecke and M. Greengrass (eds) Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature Vol. LXIX (Publications of 1983) (The Historical Association, 1985) 232 pp. The publication involves the commissioning, editing and presentation of the text produced by a team of 25 international scholars.

16. J (ii) M. Greengrass (ed) Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature Vol LXX (Publications of 1984) (The Historical Association, 1986) 218 pp. 17. J (iii) M. Greengrass (ed) Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature Vol LXXI (Publications of 1985) (The Historical Association, 1987) 247 pp.

18. J (iv) M. Greengrass (ed), Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature lxxii (Publications of 1986) (The Historical Association, 1988), 239 pp.

19. J (v) M. Greengrass (ed) and J. Smith, Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature Vol lxxiii (Publications of 1987) Historical Association, 229 pp.

20. J (v) M. Greengrass and J. Smith, "General History" in J. Smith (ed), Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature 74 (Publications of 1988) (Oxford, Blackwell, 1990) pp. 1-7.

21. J (vi) “Europe in the Sixteenth Century”; contribution to Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature 75 (Publications of 1989) (Oxford, Blackwell), pp. 52-56.

22. J (vii) “Europe in the Sixteenth Century”; contribution to Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature 76 (Publications of 1990) (Oxford, Blackwell), pp. 60-65.

Chapter Contributions to Books:

23. “Provincial Dissension in the reign of Henri III, 1574-1585” in Crown and Communities in England and France in the Fifteenth Century, eds R. Highfield and R.M. Jeffs (Alan Sutton, Gloucester, 1981), pp. 162-84.

24. “The Later Wars of Religion in the French Midi” in Peter Clark (ed.), The European Crisis of the 1590s (Allen and Unwin, London, 1985), pp. 106-34 + 3 figures.

25. M. Greengrass, “Mary, Dowager Queen of France” The Innes Review xxxviii (1987) pp. 171-94 and M. Lynch, Mary Stewart, Queen in Three Kingdoms (Blackwell, Oxford, 1988).

26. “Henri de Montmorency-Damville et l’administration des armées provinciales de Languedoc” in l'Avènement d'Henri IV: Quatrième Centenaire (Bayonne, 1989), pp. 103-123.

27. “The Public Context of the Abjuration of Henri IV” in Keith Cameron (ed.), From Valois to Bourbon. Dynasty, State and Society in Early Modern France (Exeter Studies in History, 24, 1989), pp. 107-26.

28. “Henri IV et Elisabeth I: les dettes d'une amitié” in L'Avènement d'Henri IV: Quatrième Centenaire (Pau/Nérac, 1990), pp. 353-70.

29. “Nicolas Pithou: experience, conscience and history in the French civil wars” in Religion, culture and society in early modern Britain, eds Anthony Fletcher and Peter Roberts, (Cambridge U.P., 1994), pp. 1-28.

30. “The Calvinist experiment in Béarn” in European Calvinism, eds Andrew Pettegree, G. Lewis and A. Duke (Cambridge U.P., 1994), pp. 119-142 [translated as “l’Expérience calviniste en Béarn” in Revue de Pau et du Béarn, vol xxi (1994), pp. 37-60].

31. “Samuel Hartlib, intelligenceur européen” in La Diffusion et l'Affrontement des idées en Europe 1600-1750 (Montbrison, 1994), pp. 213-234.

32. “The Hartlib Papers Project: an Electronic Edition of the Past for the Future” in Changing Patterns of Online Information, eds. C.J. Armstrong and R.J. Hartley (Ukolog, Oxford, 1994), pp. 73-87.

33. “The monarchy of France and the Reformation” in Reformation in National Context, ed. R. Scribner, Roy Porter and Milukás Teich (Cambridge U.P, 1994), pp. 47-66.

34. “A Day in the Life of the Third Estate: Blois, 26th December 1576” in Adrianna Bakos (ed.), Politics, Ideology and the Law in Early Modern Europe (University of Rochester Press, Rochester, New York, 1994), ch. 5 (pp. 73-90).

35. J “The French reformation on English soil: religious change in the Channel Islands” in Randolph Vigne and Graham C. Gibbs (eds), The Strangers’ Progress. Integration and disintegration of the Huguenots and Walloon refugees, 1567-1689 (Huguenot Society Proceedings Vol XXVI, No 2, 1995), ch.iii, pp. 173-185.

36. “Functions and limits of political clientism in France before Cardinal Richelieu” in Neithard Bulst, Robert Descimon and Alain Guerreau, L'Etat ou le Roi: les fondation de la modernité monarchique en France (XIV-XVIIe siècles) (Editions de la Maison des sciences de l'homme, Paris, 1996), pp. 69-82.

37. “Archive Refractions: Hartlib’s Papers and the workings of an Intelligencer” in Michael Hunter (ed.), Archives of the Scientific Revolution. The Formation and Exchange of Ideas in Seventeenth-Century Europe (Woodbridge, The Boydell Press, 1998), pp. 35-47.

38. “Financing the Cause: protestant mobilisation and accountability in France (1562-1589)” in Philip Benedict and Henk van Nierop (eds) Reformation, Revolt and Civil War in France and the Netherlands, 1555-1585 (Amsterdam, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1999), pp. 233-254.

39. “Hidden Transcripts: personal testimonies of religious violence in the French wars of religion” in Mark Levene and Penny Roberts (eds), The Massacre in History (New York and Oxford, Berghahn, 1999), pp. 69-88.

40. “The Project for the “Taille Egalée” at the Estates General of Blois, 1576-77” in Chantal Grell and Arnaud Ramière de Fortanier (eds), Le second ordre: l’idéal nobiliaire (Paris, Presses de l’Université de Paris-Sorbonne, 1999), pp. 169-181.

41. “Amnestie et ‘oubliance’: un discours politique autour des édits de pacification pendant les guerres de religion” in Paix des Armes, Paix des âmes (Paris, Société Nationale Henri IV et l’Imprimerie Nationale, 2000), pp. 113-123.

42. “Pieces of the jigsaw: French royal finances under the last Valois, 1574-1589” in R.J. Bonney and M. Ormrod (eds), Crises, revolutions and selfsustained growth. Essays in European fiscal history, 1130-1830 (Gloucester, Alan Sutton, 2000), pp. 140-172.

43.

“Informal Networks in Sixteenth-Century French Protestantism” in Ray Mentzer and Andrew Spicer, Society and Culture in the Huguenot World 1559-1665 (Cambridge, Cambridge U.P., 2001), ch. 6, pp. 78-97.

44. “Miracles and the Peregrinations of the Holy in France during the wars of religion” in José Pedro Paiva, Religious ceremonials and images: power and social meaning (1400-1750) (Coimbra, Palimage Edutores, 2002), pp. 389-414.

45. “Samuel Hartlib and the commonwealth of learning” in John Barnard and D.F. McKenzie (eds), The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2002) ch. 13, pp. 304-322.

46. “An Edict and its Antecedents; the pacification of Nantes and the political culture in later sixteenth-century France”, in Ruth Whelan and Carol Baxter (eds), Toleration and Religious Identity (Dublin, Four Courts Press, 2003), ch. 7, pp. 128146.

47.

“The French Pastorate: Confessional Identity and Confessionalization in the Huguenot Minority, 1559-1685” , in Luise Schorn-Schütte and C. Scott Dixon, The Protestant Clergy of Early-Modern Europe (Basingstoke, Palgrave, 2003), ch.8, pp. 176-195 and 237-339.

48. J [ed. With Simon Adams] “Mémoires et Procédures de ma Negociation en Angleterre (8 October 1582-8 October 1583)” by Jean Malliet, Councillor of Geneva” – in Ian Archer [ed.] Religion, Politics, and Society in Sixteenth-Century England Camden Miscellany Fifth Series, Volume 22 (Cambridge U.P., for the Royal Historical Society, 2003), pp. 137-267

49. J [with Thomas S. Freeman] “John Foxe and the Continent” in the online edition of John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs (HriOnline, 2004, see below) – 9,500 words.

50. J Mark Greengrass [with Joy Lloyd and Sue Smith], “TwentyFirst Century Foxe. The Online Variorum Edition of Foxe’s Acts and Monuments” in David Loades (ed.), John Foxe at Home and Abroad (Aldershot, Ashgate, 2004)), pp. 257-269.

51. “Henri III, festival culture and the rhetoric of royalty” in Ronnie Mulryne (ed), Europe Triumphans 2 vols (Aldershot, Ashgate, 2004), 1, pp. 105-115.

52. “Regicide, Martyrs and Monarchical Authority in France in the Wars of Religion” in Robert von Friedeburg (ed.), Murder and Monarchy. Regicide in European History, 1300-1800 (London: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2004), pp. 176-192.

53. “Conclusion. Moderate Voices: Mixed Messages” in Alec Rylie and Luc Racaut (eds), Moderate Voices in theEuropean Reformation (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005), pp. 196-211.

54. “Passions and the Patria: Michel de l’Hospital and the Reformation of the French Polity in the wars of religion”, in Robert von Friedeburg (ed.), ‘Patria’ und ‘Patrioten’ vor dem Patriotismus. Flichten, Rechte, Glauben und die Rekonfigurierung europäischer Gemeinwesen im 17. Jahrhundert (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2005), pp. 287-308.

55. ‘Politics and warfare’ in Euan Cameron (ed.), The Oxford Shorter History of Sixteenth-Century Europe (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006), pp. 58-88 and 219-221. Spanish translation (by Teofilo de Lozoya and Juan Rabasseda-Gascon) as ‘Politica y guerra’ in El Siglo XVI (Barcelona: Critica, 2006), pp. 71-103.

56. ‘Philippe du Plessis-Mornay, Jacques VI et I, et la Réunion du Christianisme, 1603-1619’ for Hugues Daussy and Véronique Ferrer (eds), Servir Dieu, le roi et l’état. Philippe du Plessis-Mornay, 1549-1623. Actes du colloque de Saumur (13-15 mai 2004) (Geneva and Paris: Droz and Champion, 2006), pp. 423-461.

57.

‘The Theology and Liturgy of Reformed Christianity’ – in Ronnie Hsia (ed.), Cambridge History of Christianity, vol VI (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006), pp. 104-124.

58. ` [with Judith Pollman et al] – ch. 11 - ‘Introduction’ [pp. 221235] and ch. 16 – ‘Two Sixteenth-Century Religious Minorities and their Scribal Networks’ [pp. 317-227] contributions to Heinz Schilling and Istvan Tóth (eds), Religion and Cultural Exchange in Europe, 1400-1700 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press,2006).

59. ‘Les innovations au sein de l’église établie et leurs limites : le cas français’ in Alain Talon and Philip Benedict (eds), La Réforme en France et en Italie : contacts, comparaisons et contrastes (Rome and Paris : Ecole française de Rome and Boccard, 2007), pp. 127-143.

60. ‘La France, face aux affrontements religieux de l’époque de la Réforme’ in L’Europe en Conflit (dir. Wolfgang Kaiser) (Rennes, Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2009), pp. 37-60 – ISBN 978-2-7555-0656-5.

61. ‘Epilogue: Régime Change, Restoration and Reformation’ in Alison Forrestal and Eric Nelson (eds), Politics and Religion in Early Bourbon France (Basingstoke; Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), ISBN 978-0-230-52139-1, pp. 246-260.

Dictionary Entries

62. “Henri III” in The Oxford Dictionary of the Reformation 4 vols (New York and Oxford, 1995), vol ii.

63. “Arnold Boate”, “Samuel Hartlib” and “George Starkey” in Dictionary of Seventeenth-Century British Philosophers (Bristol, Thoemmes, 2000), 2 vols, 1, pp. 103-5; 393-5; 764-7.

64. (2003) - [6,000 words].

“The Protestant Reformation” for MSN Encarta Encyclopedia

65. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2004): entries on Adam Speed; Cressy Dymock; Sir Cheney Culpeper; Samuel Hartlib ; Hezekiah Woodward; Dorothy Dury; John Amos Comenius; Sir Henry Unton; Sir Henry Neville; Sir Thomas Edmondes (total: 15,000 words).

66. Dictionary entries on ‘Samuel Hartlib’, ‘Jan Comenius’, ‘The Huguenots’ and ‘The Condé Family’ for the Dictionary of Early-Modern Europe (Charles Scribner and Sons, New York, 2004), 2, pp. 7-8; 33-5; 3, pp. 137-139; 214-217.

Articles:

67. “Mathurin Charretier: a politique during the wars of religion in France”, Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of London, xxiii (1981), pp. 330-40.

68. “Anatomy of a Religious Riot: Toulouse in May 1562”, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, xxxiv (1983), pp. 367-91.

69. “The Sainte Union in the Provinces: the case of Toulouse”, The Sixteenth Century Journal, xiv (1983), pp. 469-96.

70. Review article: “The Sixteen, Radical Politics in Paris during the League” History, 69 (1984), pp. 432-9.

71. “Protestant Exiles and the assimilation in early modern England”, Immigrants and Minorities X iv (1985), pp. 68-81.

72. “Noble Affinities in early modern France: the case of Henri de Montmorency-Damville, constable of France”, European Studies Quarterly, xvi (1986), pp. 275-311.

73.

“Aristocracy and Episcopacy at the end of the wars of religion in France: the Duke of Montmorency and the bishoprics of Languedoc”, Miscellanea Historiae Ecclesiasticae VIII, ed. B. Vogler, (Brussels & Louvain, 1987), pp. 356-63.

74. “Property and Politics in Sixteenth-Century France: The Landed Fortune of Constable Anne of Montmorency”, French History ii (1988), pp. 371-98.

75. pp. 11-17.

“The Assassination of Henry III”, History Today xxxix (1989),

76. “Les Compagnons du roi” in Henri IV et la reconstruction du royaume (Editions de la réunion des Musées Nationaux; Archives Nationales, 1989), pp. 250-62.

77. “Irreligion in the French Wars of Religion” in The French Historian, vol. 5 (Dec 1990), pp. 3-10.

78. (1991), pp. 467-74.

“The Psychology of Religious Violence” French History, 5

79. “Popular Violence in the French Religious Wars”, History Sixth No 15 (March 1993) pp. 6-10.

80. “Hartlib and International Calvinism”, Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, xxv (1993), pp. 464-475.

81. 1993), pp. 45-49.

“Interfacing Samuel Hartlib”, History Today, xliii (December

82. J (with Peter Willett, Sandy Robinson and Robyn Schinke), “Stemming of Latin Text” in The British Computing Society Information Retrieval Specialist Group 18th Annual Colloquium (PCS/IRSG, Manchester, 1995), pp. 81-93.

83. “Renaissance with dog-eared edges” Times Higher Education Supplement, 9 February 1996, article of 2,000 words.

84. “The financing of a Seventeenth-Century Intellectual: Contributions for Comenius, 1637-1641” in Acta Comeniana. Internationale Revue für Studien über J.A. Comenius und ideengeschichte der frühen Neuzeit vol 11 (XXXV) (1995), pp. 71-87; 141-157.

85. J (with Peter Willett, Sandy Robinson and Robyn Schinke), “A stemming algorithm for Latin Text Databases”, Journal of Documentation vol lii (1996), pp. 172-87.

86. “Sir Balthazar Gerbier et la Pascaline”, Courrier du centre international Blaise Pascal vol xix (1997), pp. 10-16.

87. “An ‘Intelligencer’s Workshop’: Samuel Hartlib’s Ephemerides” in Studia Comeniana et Historica 26 (1996), pp. 48-62.

88. “Samuel Hartlib and Scribal Communication” in Acta Comeniana 12 (1997), pp. 47-62.

89. J (with Peter Willett, Alexander Robinson and Robyn Schinke) "Filofacs: a tool for searching Latin databases", History and Computing 9(1) (1997), pp. 2935.

90. “Kenneth Harold Dobson Haley”, Proceedings of the British Academy, 101 (1999) pp. 407-415.

91. “Technology and Tolerance during the Commonwealth: Samuel Hartlib and the Republic of Letters” in Confluences 17 (2000), pp. 107-127.

92. “Les basses terres anglaises de la république des lettres au XVIIe siècle” In Nouvelles de la République des Lettres (Collège de France, Paris), 2001, pp. 138-156.

93. “The Dynamic of Religious Violence”, Leidschrift. Historisch Tijdschrift 20.1 (2005), pp. 109-122.

94. ‘”La Grande Cassure”: violence and the French Reformation’ in Luise Schorne-Schûtte and Robert von Friedeburg, Politik und Religion: Eigenlogik oder Verzahnung? Europa im 16. Jahrhundert. [Historische Zeitschrift, Beihefte, ed. Lothar Gall] (Munich, Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, 2006), pp. 71-92.

95. “Money, Majesty and Virtue: The Rhetoric of Monetary Reform in Later Sixteenth-Century France”, French History 21 (2007), pp. 165-86.

96.

‘The Calvinist and the Chancellor: the Mental world of Louis Turquet de Mayerne’ in Francia. Forschungen zur westeuropäischen Geschichte 34/1 (2007), pp. 1-23.

97. J I. Charmantier, M. Greengrass, and T.R. Birkhead, ‘Re-writing Renaissance Ornithology: J.B. Faultrier’s “Traitté general des oyseaux” ’, Archives of Natural History 35 (October 2008): 319-338.

98. [with Matthias Pohlig] ‘Focal Point: The Protestant Reformation and the Middle Ages’, Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 101 (2010), pp. 391-

395; and [with Matthew Phillpott] ‘John Bale, John Foxe, and the Reformation of the English Past’, Ibid., pp. 433-446.

99. [with David Parrott and Lyndal Roper] ‘Robin Briggs – Historian’, French History 25 (2011), pp. 1-13.

100.J [with Thomas Freeman], ‘Scribal Communication and Scribal Publication in early Calvinism: the evidence of the letters of the martyrs’ in Irene Dingel and Hermann J. Selderhuis (eds), Calvin und Calvinismus. Europäische Perspektiven. Veröffentlichungen des Instituts für Europäische Geschichte Mainz Beihefte, Band 84. (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht, 2011), pp. 394-418.

101.J

[with Neil Cox] ‘Painting Power: Antoine Caron’s Massacres of the Triumvirate’ in Graeme Murdock, Andrew Spicer and Penny Roberts (eds), Ritual and Violence: Natalie Zemon Davis and Early Modern France (Oxford: Past and Present Supplement Series, 2012), pp. 241-274.

102. ‘Une Histoire qui Intrigue: La Réforme en Béarn vue par un pasteur converti’ in Fabien Salesse (dir.), Le bon historien sait faire parler les silences (Toulouse, Méridiennes, 2012), pp. 207-220. 103. ‘Scribal Networks and Sustainers in Protestant Martyrology’ in Anne Dunan-Page and Clotilde Prunier (eds), Debating the Faith: Religion and Letter Writing, 1500-1800, International Archives of the History of Ideas/Archives internationales d’histoire des idées (Dordrecht: Springer, 2012), pp. 9-35 [ISBN 978-94-007-5215-3]. 104. ‘The Experiential World of Jean Bodin’ in Howell Lloyd (ed.), The Reception of Jean Bodin (Leiden: Brill, 2013), ch. 3, pp. 67-96 [ISBN 978-90-04-236080].

105. ‘Language and Conflict in the Wars of Religion’ in Jane Ohlmeyer and Micheál Ó Siochrú (eds), Ireland 1641: Contexts and Reactions (Manchester: Manchester U.P., 2013), ch. 11, pp. 197-218 [ISBN 978 0 7189 8817 9].

106. ‘Europe’s Wars of Religion’ and their Legacies’ in John Wolffe (ed.), Protestant-Cathoic Conflict from the Reformation to the Twenty-first Century. The

Dynamics of Religious Difference (Palgrave Macmillan: Houndmills, 2013), ch. 2, pp. 22-45 [ISBN 978 1 137 28972 8].

107. « J’ay finalement réussi à réduire toutes ces pièces en un corps ». Historical coherence and the Histoire Ecclésiastiques des Eglises Réformées de France (1580)’ in Pierre-Olivier Léchot, Hugues Daussy and Philip Benedict (eds), Huguenot Historiography (Geneva : Droz, 2014), ch. 2, pp. 68-86.

108. ‘Desserrant les Nœuds. François Rasse et les premières guerres de religion’ in Gabriele Haug-Moritz and Lothar Schilling (eds), Médialité et interprétation contemporaine des premières Guerres de Religion. Ateliers des Deutschen Historischen Instituts Paris, Band 10. (Institut Historique Allemand, Paris et de Gruyter, Oldenbourg: 2014), pp. 64-80.

b)

Electronic Publications:

109. J M. Greengrass and M.P. Leslie (eds) Samuel Hartlib: The Complete Edition (UMI, Ann Arbor Michigan, 1995), 23.5 million words - 2 CD ROMS and Users’ Guide.

110. J M. Greengrass and M.P. Leslie (eds), The Hartlib Papers (Second Edition) [CD-ROM]. HriOnline, Sheffield, UK., 2002.

111. J M. Greengrass and Scott Dixon, The Protestant Reformation: Religious Change and the People of Sixteenth-Century Europe (Glasgow, History Courseware Consortium, 1999), c.45,000 words of text generated by M. Greengrass with accompagnying edited documentation – 1 CD-ROM.

112. J John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs. The Variorum Edition Online. [http://www.hrionline.ac.uk/foxe/]. HR Online, Sheffield, UK, 2004. c. 8.5 million words, including edited prefatory essays, editorial apparatus and edited text.

113. J Stephen Brown, Robert Ross, Mark Greengrass and Jared Bryson, RePAH. A User Requirements Analysis for Portals in the Arts and Humanities

(Report commissioned for the AHRC ICT in Arts and Humanities Programme and published by HriOnline, Sheffield, 2006), 267pp.

114.J

c)

[with Stephen Brown] ‘Research Portals in the Arts and Humanities’ in Literary and Linguistic Computing (2009) – published online by Oxford University Press at doi:10.1093/llc/fqp032.

Print Publications in press and final preparation:

Articles and Chapters:

1. ‘Rumeur et Bien Public dans les ligues catholiques provinciales : l’exemple de Laon’ in Les Ligues Provinciales en France pendant les guerres de religion (Paper from a conference at the University of Montpellier-Paul Valéry, to be published by the Presses universitaires de Rennes in 2016).

2. « Les Protestants et la désacralisation de la monarchie française, 1557-1567 » in Régicides en Europe XVIe-XIXe siècles (Pau, Musée National du Château de Pau, 2016) [6,500 words].

4. Jacques Amyot et son traducteur anglais, Sir Roger North’ in Autour de Jacques Amyot. Colloque pour le 500e anniversaire de sa naissance (Paris : Société de l’Histoire de France, 2014), [6,000 words].

5.J [with H. Daussy], ‘La Fin des Institutions Politico-Militaires’ in Philippe Charèyre, Hugues Daussy and Philip Benedict, La France Huguenote (Geneva : Droz, 2016), ch. 13 [8,000 words]

6. « L’intendance des affaires de Charles Cardinal de Lorraine », in Jean Balsamo et al. (eds), le Cardinal de Lorraine, Reims et l'Europe (Geneva: Droz, 2015), [9,000 words].

7.J [with Daisy Hildyard, Chris Preston and Paul Smith] ‘Science on the Move: Francis Willughby’s Expeditions’ in Timothy Birkhead (ed.), Virtuoso by Nature. The Scientific Worlds of Francis Willughby (Brill, Leiden, 2016), [12,000 words].

8. ‘Hugh Trevor Roper’s “Three Foreigners and the Philosophy of the Puritan Revolution” in Blair Worden (ed.), Hugh Trevor Roper in Review (Berhahn Books, New York, 2016), [6,000 words].

9. ‘Outspoken Opinions as Collectable Items. Engagement and divertissement in the French Civil Wars’ in Hugh Roberts et al., Gossip and Rumour in Early-Modern England and France (special issues of Renaissance Quarterly), end 2015 [8,000 words].

10. ‘Patrick Collinson’s The Reformation (2003); or, Religious Change in Early-Modern Europe from a Safe Distance’ in Alex Walsham and John Morrill (eds), Patrick Collinson [special issue of The Historian], end 2015 [5,000 words].

11.J [with Thierry Rentet and Stéphane Gal] ‘The Hinterland of the Newsletter: Handling Information in Space and Time’ in News Networks in Early Modern Europe: Methods and Case Studies. Ed. Noah Moxham and Joad Raymond (Leiden: Brill, 2016) [10,000 words].

12.J [with Mark Critchlow and Marco Penzi] ‘Unfinished Business: An Edition of the ‘Manuscript History of the League’ in Barbara Diefendorf (ed.), Social Relations, Politics and Power in early-modern France (Delaware: Truman State University Press, 2015), ch. 10. 13. ‘The Epistolary Reformation: The role and significance of letters in the first century of the Reformation’, Ulinka Rublack (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Reformation (Oxford; Oxford University Press, 2016).

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