Voices for Tolerance: James I and Religious Toleration

Voices for Tolerance
In an Age of Persecution

on exhibit June 9 - October 30, 2004

James I and
Religious Toleration

The accession of James VI, king of Scotland, as James I, king of England, on Elizabeth's death in 1603 encouraged both Catholics and Puritans to hope for increased religious freedom. Catholics especially hoped that the son of the Catholic Mary, Queen of Scots, would bring toleration for the practice of their faith. Though James was thoroughly suspicious of Puritans and, for a variety of political reasons, at times lenient towards Catholics, the attempt by a group of Catholic zealots to blow up Parliament, the Gunpowder Plot (1605), ensured their continued status as a suspect minority.

Eygentliche Abbildung wie ettlich englische Edelleut einen Raht schliessen den König sampt dem gantzen Parlament mit Pulfer zuvertilgen, [1606] ©

This German engraving of the Gunpowder Plot depicts in intricate detail the plotters and their ultimate fates.

Voices for Tolerance in an Age of Persecution
Exhibition Highlights

Humanists for Peace | The Reformation | The Struggle for Religious Toleration | The Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day | Jews in Early Modern Europe | The Miseries of Religious War | Ambivalence towards Islam | Encountering Africans | Catholics in England | James I and Religious Toleration | The Puritan Revolution | Ireland | Debating Toleration in the Restoration | "Acts" of Toleration | Voices for Tolerance Amidst Acts of Hate

Exhibition Intro | Visiting the Folger



This page updated September 29, 2004