@inbook{10.7722/j.ctt163tc5f.18, ISBN = {9781843832539}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7722/j.ctt163tc5f.18}, abstract = {A struggle in 1673–80 over whether or not to preserve a gallery built across the east end of the chancel in St George Tombland in Norwich seems an unlikely point of entry into the contested religious politics of post-Restoration England. Yet the gallery at St George’s became a focal point for conflicting readings of the recent past and the present priorities of English protestantism, exposing tensions within the parish elite and the diocesan administration of Norwich. The eventual demolition of the gallery and its replacement with a railed and beautified altar in 1680 anticipated that broader shift in parish}, booktitle = {Religious Politics in Post-Reformation England}, edition = {NED - New edition}, pages = {224--240}, publisher = {Boydell and Brewer}, title = {Material Evidence: The Religious Legacy of the Interregnum at St George Tombland, Norwich}, year = {2006} }