If any undergraduate wishes to work on the connection between Puritanism and revolution, this should be the first book on his bibliography.
- Conrad Russell, History
Here is good vintage Hill, daring to take seriously eccentric-sounding subjects, and never making the crude mistake of underestimating the genuine religious basis of dissent.
- Bernard Crick, New Statesman
Arguably his most flawless achievement-an inspiring lesson in scholarship, writing and interpretation.
Times Literary Supplement
Christopher Hill, one of Britain's most distinguished historians, here reconstructs the significance of Antichrist during the revolutionary crises of the early seventeenth century. Radical Protestant sects applied the term-a name synonymous with repression and persecution-to those Establishment institutions of which they disapproved; in particular, the Pope. Then, with that revolution in thought which resulted in the separation of religion from politics, the figure of Antichrist lost its significance.