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5 - English ‘church reform’ revisited, 1780–1840

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 December 2009

Arthur Burns
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer in Modern British History, King's College, London
Arthur Burns
Affiliation:
King's College London
Joanna Innes
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

‘Church reform’ is one of the most widely deployed concepts in ecclesiastical historiography. In the modern English context, it moved seamlessly during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries from being of central importance in the discussions of ecclesiastical policy-makers to assume a place as a key category in the conceptual apparatus of historical inquiry into the shaping of the Victorian Church of England. From the late 1950s to the early 1970s, the heroic age of ecclesiastical and institutional historiography of the nineteenth-century church, it was ubiquitous. The ecclesiastical reforms of the first half of the nineteenth century were indeed unprecedented in extent, including as they did the redrawing of the diocesan map of England and Wales, a systematic reallocation of church revenues both geographically and between different levels of the church hierarchy, and significant new statutory regulation of clerical practice. While other projects of the ‘age of reform’ attracted a resurgence of interest during the 1990s, however, this did not extend to its ecclesiastical dimension, even though ‘religious’ dimensions of modern British history were also attracting renewed attention.

Why? The answer lies partly in intellectual fashion. Many Hanoverian historians still unconsciously marginalize the theological or religious dimensions of their subjects. But historians of modern British religion are as much to blame. They escaped their professional marginalization of the 1960s and 1970s through significant advances in the social history of religion, studies focusing on popular belief and culture, and considerations of the religious dimension of the ‘history of ideas’, all of which had important implications for ‘secular’ histories.

Type
Chapter
Information
Rethinking the Age of Reform
Britain 1780–1850
, pp. 136 - 162
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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