Natalia Nowakowska has been a Tutor and Fellow in Early Modern History at Somerville College, University of Oxford, since 2007. She read History at Oxford as an undergraduate, and went on to hold post-doctoral positions at King's College London and University College, Oxford (and to work briefly in social policy). She is the author of a prize-winning first book on late medieval Poland, recipient of a British Academy Mid-Career Fellowship, and is currently the Principal Investigator of a major five-year European-Research Council funded project entitled 'Jagiellonians: Dynasty, Memory & Identity in Central Europe'.
* PART 1: HYPOTHESIS
* Introduction: Beyond Toleration - the Reformation before
Confessionalisation
* PART 2. CONTEXTS
* People, Places, Texts
* 1: A New Narrative? The Polish Monarchy and the Early Reformation
(1518-c.1540)
* PART 3. EPISODES
* 2: Drama in Danzig: The Crown and Reformation in Royal Prussia.
* 3: A Naughty Nephew: The Polish Crown and Lutheran Ducal Prussia
* 4: Hollow Law? Royal Edicts Against Lutheranism
* 5: 'A Most Pious Prince': The Reformation Diplomacy of Sigismund I
* 6: A Smoked Pig, Monsters and Sheep: The Polish Church and
Lutheranism
* PART 4. LANGUAGE ANALYSIS
* 7: Defining Lutheranism
* 8: Defining Catholicism
* Conclusions