An important early twentieth-century study that argued for the importance of Lollard influences on the English Reformation.This four-volume history argues that the origins of the English Reformation lie in the Lollard movement of the fourteenth century. First published in 1908, Volume 2 considers the immediate causes of the English Reformation, beginning with the rise of German Protestantism and ending with the death of Henry VIII.This four-volume history argues that the origins of the English Reformation lie in the Lollard movement of the fourteenth century. First published in 1908, Volume 2 considers the immediate causes of the English Reformation, beginning with the rise of German Protestantism and ending with the death of Henry VIII.James Gairdner (18281912) was one of the foremost authorities of his day on the Tudor period. This magisterial four-volume survey (originally published 19081913) argues that the impetus for the English Reformation came from the Lollard movement of the late fourteenth century. A prolific researcher and editor, Gairdner devoted his career to English history, and his study is both meticulous and factually sound. His critics, however, were quick to observe that the Lollard hypothesis was tenuous, and this mature work is most valuable today to those interested in the history of Reformation scholarship. Focusing on the more immediate causes of the Reformation, Volume 2, published in 1908, considers the rise of German Protestantism, the dissolution of the monasteries, the history of the English Bible and the influence of Katherine Parr and the New Learning, concluding with the death of Henry VIII in 1547.Book III. The Fall of the Monasteries: 1. Further trials of the faithful; 2. Visitation and suppression of monasteries; 3. Further proceedings against monasteries, and against superstitions; 4. German Protestantism and the Act of the Six Articles; Book IV. The Reign of the English Bible: 1. The story of the English Bible; 2. The making ofls