There can be no mistaking the immense contribution of this exceptional study: it is unlikely to be surpassed.
Marcus Nevitt, The Seventeenth Century
John Walter's tightly argued and richly detailed Covenanting Citizens: The Protestation Oath and Popular Political Culture in the English Revolution is a significant contribution to English Revolution scholarship, and in particular to the scholarship on the outbreak of the Civil War...It is a landmark study.
Gary Rivett, Journal of British Studies
absorbing, well-written, astonishing in its range of sources, often surprising ... It is an exceptional achievement.
Dr Richard Luckett, judging panel of the Samuel Pepys Award 2017
I would recommend this book for anyone interested in the history of early modern British politics, print, and religion, especially for those wanting to study the impact of how print was used as a tool to promote the oath.
Eilish Gregory, Reviews in History
Here is a monograph which is absolutely fundamental for all of us still chasing the origins of the English civil war, written in limpid prose through which shines his mastery of the discipline ... This may be the most satisfying account, in a mere 266 pages, of how civil war broke out in England that has yet been written.
Anthony Fletcher, History
Covenanting Citizens is a welcomed contribution to our understanding of early modern oath-taking and political engagement on the eve of the Civil War. Walter's detailed and balanced research into manuscripts, diaries, and print culture, shows that the Protestation was much more than an act by Parliament; it was a sacred promise, taken in every county, to defend a reformed Protestant nation ... a substantial contribution to seventeenth-century scholarship.
Brett F. Parker, Seventeenth-Century News