The Journey to the Mayflower
God’s Outlaws and the Invention of Freedom
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Narrated by:
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Richard Burnip
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By:
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Stephen Tomkins
About this listen
2020 sees the 400th anniversary of the sailing of the Mayflower - the ship that took the Pilgrim Fathers to the New World. It's a foundational event in American history, but it began as an English story, which pioneered the idea of religious freedom.
The illegal underground movement of Protestant separatists from Elizabeth I's Church of England is a story of subterfuge and danger, arrests and interrogations, prison and executions. It starts with Queen Mary's attempts to burn Protestantism out of England, which created a Protestant underground. Later, when Elizabeth's Protestant reformation didn't go far enough, radicals re-created that underground, meeting illegally throughout England, facing prison and death for their crimes. They went into exile in the Netherlands, where they lived in poverty - and finally the New World.
Stephen Tomkins tells this fascinating story - one that is rarely told as an important piece of English as well as American history - that is full of contemporary relevance: religious violence, the threat to national security, freedom of religion and tolerance of dangerous opinions.
This is a must-listen book for anyone interested in the untold story of how the Mayflower came to be launched.
©2020 Stephen Tomkins (P)2020 Hodder & Stoughton LtdWhat listeners say about The Journey to the Mayflower
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- Anonymous User
- 02-05-2020
Great narrator, but a bit tedious
I wanted to know the story leading up to the pilgrims journey across the Atlantic. This story certainly gave me that but also included reams and reams of details that made the story too long for the amateur historian that I am. I'm sure a true historian would love hearing the minutiae but most of it was lost on me. By the end, the names, the places and the endless theological controversies began to blur.
Fantastic narration, without which I may not have finished the book.
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