Christopher Haigh is a British historian specialising in religion and politics around the English Reformation.
Haigh was a very influential revisionist in Tudor historiography and on the English Reformation.
Haigh's writings mostly demonstrated that, contrary to orthodox understandings of the English Reformation, religious reform was extremely complex and varied considerably at a parish level.
[1] Haigh has also been noted for his work in diminishing the significance attributed to anticlericalism prior to 1530.
[2][3] His revisionism formed part of a broader wave in Tudor historiography with other historians such as Eamon Duffy.