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Book Categories |
Preface | ||
Introduction | 1 | |
1 | The Established Church in 1760 | 4 |
The Church's involvement in politics | 5 | |
The development of the clerical profession | 10 | |
The character of the episcopate | 16 | |
Pluralism and non-residence | 19 | |
The Church and the people in 1760 | 25 | |
Clerical incomes | 28 | |
A reformed and unreformed Church? | 32 | |
The Church in Wales | 36 | |
2 | Church and State, 1760-1830 | 41 |
The Church's relations with the State: the American Revolution and the abolition of slavery | 41 | |
The impact of the French Revolution | 48 | |
The Tory Governments and Church patronage, 1801-30 | 53 | |
Church Parties: The Hackney Phalanx and the Clapham Sect | 58 | |
The Church, Toleration and Emancipation, 1760-1830 | 67 | |
3 | Religion and Social Change | 76 |
Methodism and politics: the Halevy thesis | 76 | |
Patterns of religious practice, 1760-1850 | 83 | |
The urban Church and industrialisation | 89 | |
The Church's wider social missions | 96 | |
4 | The Church and the Reforms of the 1830s | 106 |
The Church and the 1832 Reform Act | 106 | |
The Church and the ecclesiastical reforms of the 1830s | 112 | |
The Church and the Whig reforms of the 1830s | 122 | |
The Whigs and Church patronage, 1830-41 | 128 | |
Reform and the Oxford Movement | 137 | |
5 | Religion and Society Outside the Establishment | 144 |
Roman Catholicism and 'Papal Aggression' | 144 | |
The new dissent: the development of Methodism | 149 | |
Old dissent: variety and convergence | 155 | |
Religion without Christianity: the Jews | 164 | |
6 | Religion in Mid-Victorian England | 168 |
The religious census of 1851 | 168 | |
Religion and cultural change | 171 | |
Religion, the family and women | 174 | |
Religion and the working classes by 1851 | 179 | |
Notes | 183 | |
A Note on Sources | 188 | |
Bibliography | 190 | |
Index | 197 |
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Add Church, State, and Society: 1760-1850 (British History in Perspective), The period between 1760 and 1850 was one of the most rapid periods of change in British history. The emergence of an industrial economy, the development of pressures for social and political reforms and the growth of Nonconformist churches posed threats t, Church, State, and Society: 1760-1850 (British History in Perspective) to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Church, State, and Society: 1760-1850 (British History in Perspective), The period between 1760 and 1850 was one of the most rapid periods of change in British history. The emergence of an industrial economy, the development of pressures for social and political reforms and the growth of Nonconformist churches posed threats t, Church, State, and Society: 1760-1850 (British History in Perspective) to your collection on WonderClub |