Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ttngx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-18T03:13:36.929Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Religion and national feeling in nineteenth-century Wales and Scotland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

D. W. Bebbington*
Affiliation:
University of Stirling

Extract

Wales and Scotland were in the nineteenth century, as they have remained in the twentieth, nations within a multinational state. Where boundaries of nation and state did not coincide in nineteenth-century Europe there was commonly a surge of feeling in favour of achieving a remedy. This was equally true of nations like Italy and Germany that were divided internally by political frontiers and of nations like the Serbs and the Rumanians who were lumped together with other peoples under the rule of greater powers. There was an efflorescence of nationalism, that is, of the political assertion of nationhood. The British Isles were not immune, for Ireland was deeply affected by the new mood. Yet Wales and Scotland were largely untouched by the nationalist spirit. Only from the 188os, with the example of the Irish Home Rulers to imitate, was there any significant stirring of aspirations after self-government, and then the vanguard in both nations gave no thought to the possibility of taking independence as its goal. Wales and Scotland were remarkably quiescent when viewed in a European context.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1982

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 The general state of nineteenth-century national feeling in Wales and Scotland has been most usefully analysed by SirCoupland, [Reginald], Welsh and Scottish Nationalism]: a study] (London 1954)Google Scholar and by Hechter, Michael, Internal Colonialism: the Celtic fringe in British national development, 1536-1966 (London 1975)Google Scholar.

2 Richard to Gladstone, 23 April 1870, BL Gladstone Papers Add MS 44426 fol 159r.

3 Davies, E. T., Religion in the Industrial Revolution in South Wales (Cardiff 1965) p 97 Google Scholar.

4 Ibid pp 25-30.

5 Williams, [David], [A History of] Modem Wales (London 1977) p 249 Google Scholar.

6 Wills, W. D., ‘The Clergy in Socety in Mid-Victorian South Wales’, JHSCh W 24 (1974) p 29 Google Scholar.

7 Currie, [Robert], Gilbert, [Alan] and Horsley, [Lee], Churches and Churchgoers[: patterns of church growth in the British Isles since 1700] (Oxford 1977) pp 128 Google Scholar, 145, 149.

8 Williams, M. W., Creative Fellowship: an outline of the history ofCalvinistic Methodism in Wales (Caernarvon 1935)Google Scholar.

9 Currie, Gilbert and Horsley, Churches and Churchgoers p 152. [The] C[hristian] W[orld] (London) 25 January 1900 p 6.

10 CW 10 January 1907 p 3.

11 Williams, Modem Wales p 149.

12 Currie, Gilbert and Horsky, Churches and Churchgoers p 145.

13 Ibid p 152.

14 Coupland, Welsh and Scottish Nationalism p 251.

15 Y Ddraig Goch (June 1877) pp 65 seq quoted by Jones, [D. G.], ‘National movements in Wales in the Nineteenth Century’, [The Historical Basis of] Welsh Nationalism (Cardiff 1950) p 114 Google Scholar.

16 Jones, Welsh Nationalism, p 120.

17 Reports of the Commissioners of Inquiry into the State of Education in Wales (London 1848) p 519.

18 Ibid p 8.

19 Ibid p 309.

20 Ibid p 534.

21 Williams, Glanmor, Religion, Language and Nationality in Wales (Cardiff 1979) p 105 Google Scholar.

22 Coupland, Welsh and Scottish Nationalism p 200.

23 CW 19 May 1887 p 387.

24 Lloyd George to Ellis, 19 May 1887, Aberystwyth National Library of Wales Thomas Edward Ellis Collection MS 679.

25 Lloyd George to Ellis, 11 April 1891, MS 683.

26 Lloyd George to Ellis, 19 May 1887, MS 679.

27 Dunbabin, J. P. D., Rural Discontent in Nineteenth-Century Britain (London 1974) pp 211-31, 282-96Google Scholar.

28 I. G. Jones, ‘The Liberation Society and Welsh Politics, 1844 to 1868’, WelHR 1 (1961).

29 Morgan, [K. O.], Wales in British Politics [1868-1922] (Cardiff 1970) p 25 Google Scholar.

30 Ibid pp 33 seq, 67.

31 The Personal Papers of Lord Rendel, ed Hamer, F.E (London 1931) p 306 Google Scholar.

32 Morgan, Wales in British Politics pp 104-6.

33 Thomas Gee to Stuart Rendel, 17 March 1887, Aberystwyth National Library of Wales Letters and Papers of Lord Rendel MS 19450C fol 127.

34 George Lewis, Scotland a Half-educated Nation (1834) p 75 quoted by Mechie, Stewart, The Church and Scottish Social Development, 1780-1870 (London 1960) P 145 Google Scholar.

35 Currie, Gilbert and Horsley, Churches and Churchgoers pp 131, 132.

36 Ibid p 132.

37 Coupland, Welsh and Scottish Nationalism p 264.

38 Maciver, I. F., ‘The Evangelical Party and the Eldership in General Assemblies, 1820-1843’, Records of the Scottish Church History Society (Edinburgh) 20 (1978) pp 11 Google Scholar, 12.

39 Miller, Hugh, My Schools and Schoolmasters (Edinburgh 1881 edn) p 548 Google Scholar.

40 Melbourne to Maule, 28 October 1840, Edinburgh Scottish Record Office Dalhousie Papers GD’ 45/14 fol 640 quoted by Machin, G. I. T., Politics and the Churches in Great Britain, 1832 to 1868 (Oxford 1977) p 125 Google Scholar.

41 The Witness (Edinburgh), 22 January 1840.

42 Best, G. F. A., Shaftesbury (London 1964) p 74 Google Scholar.

43 Hanham, H. J., ‘Mid-Century Scottish Nationalism: romantic and radical’, Ideas and Institutions of Victorian England, ed Robson, Robert (London 1967)Google Scholar.

44 Address to the People of Scotland [and Statement of Grievances by the National Association for the Vindication of Scottish Rights], Edinburgh 1853) p 8.

45 Smith, Thomas, Memoirs of James Begg, D.D., 2 vols (Edinburgh 1888) 2 p 150 Google Scholar.

46 Address to the People of Scotland, 2nd edn, p 10.

47 Coupland, Welsh and Scottish Nationalism, pp 264 seq.

48 Simpson, P. C., The Life of Principal Rainy, 2 vols (London 1909) 1 pp 277-81Google Scholar, 2 p 3.

49 Innes, A. T., Chapters of Reminiscence (London 1913) pp 124-33Google Scholar, 157.

50 Dr R. H. Story in 1885 quoted by Kellas, J. G., ‘The Liberal Party and the Scottish Church Disestablishment Crisis’, EHR 79 (1964) p 34 Google Scholar.

53 Anne M. Gladstone to W. E. Gladstone, 31 October 1828, Hawarden St Deiniol’s Library Glynne-Gladstone MSS. Auld, Alexander, Life of John Kennedy, D.D. (London 1887) pp 48 Google Scholar, 51 seq, 71

52 Hughes, D. P., The Life of Hugh Price Hughes (London 1905) p 1 Google Scholar.

53 McLaren, E. T., Dr McLaren of Manchester: a sketch (London 1912) p 5 Google Scholar.

54 Selbie, W. B., The Life of Andrew Martin Fairbaim, D.D., D.Litt., LL.D., F.B.A., ETC. (London 1914) p 3 Google Scholar.

55 Davidson, R. T. and Benham, William, Life of Archibald Campbell Tait, Archbishop of Canterbury, 2 vols (London 1891) 1 p 5 Google Scholar.

56 Coad, F. R., A History of the Brethren Movement (Exeter 1968) pp 172 Google Scholar seq. Thompson, D. M., Let Sects and Parties Fall: a short history of the Association of Churches of Christ in Great Britain and Ireland (Birmingham 1980) p 34 Google Scholar.

57 Ward, W. R., ‘Scottish Methodism in the Age of Jabez Bunting’, Records of the Scottish Church History Society (Edinburgh) 20 (1978) pp 4752 Google Scholar.

58 Cahill, G. A., ‘Irish Catholicism and English Toryism, 1832-1848’, Review of Politics (Notre Dame, Indiana) 19 (1957)Google Scholar.

59 Ker, John, Scottish Nationality and Other Papers (Edinburgh 1887) p 5 Google Scholar.

60 Gwynfor Evans, ‘The Twentieth Century and Plaid Cymru’, Welsh Nationalism, p 131.