An important contribution to the history of 19th-century English
liberalism and post-reform politics, this book argues that the Whig
party was dominated by a new generation of politicians after 1832
who actively sponsored legislation designed to transform the
constitution from an exclusively Anglican document to a
non-sectarian, yet Christian one. Brent demonstrates that this
concern for religious toleration and the preoccupation with
ecclesiastical issues were central to Whiggery in this period, and
that the questions raised during these years were posed only to
dominate Victorian politics for the generation to come.
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