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Huguenots in Later Stuart Britain - Volume I - Crisis, Renewal, and the Ministers' Dilemma (Hardcover)
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Huguenots in Later Stuart Britain - Volume I - Crisis, Renewal, and the Ministers' Dilemma (Hardcover)
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The Huguenots in Later Stuart Britain is planned as one work to be
published in three interlinking volumes (titles/publication dates
detailed below). It examines the history of the French communities
in Britain from the Civil War, which plunged them into turmoil, to
the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713, after which there was no realistic
possibility that the Huguenots would be readmitted to France. There
is a particular focus on the decades of the 1680s and 1690s, at
once the most complex, the most crucial, and the most challenging
alike for the refugees themselves and for subsequent historians.
The work opens with the Calvinist French-speaking communities in
England caught up in the Civil War. They could not avoid it, with
many of their members largely assimilated into English society by
the 1640s. Generally they favoured the Parliamentarian side, but
any victory was pyrrhic because the Interregnum supported the
rights of Independent congregations which undermined their whole
Calvinist structure. Weakened by in-fighting, in the 1660s the
old-established French churches then had to reassert their right to
exist in the face of a sometimes hostile restored monarchy and
episcopacy, a newly licenced French church emphasizing its
Anglicanism and its loyalty to the crown, and the challenges of the
Plague and the Fire of London which burnt the largest French church
in England to the ground. They were still staggering to find their
feet when the first trickle and then the full flood of new Huguenot
immigration overwhelmed them. As for the newly arriving Huguenot
ministers, not prepared for the England to which they came, they
found they had to resolve what was often an intense personal
dilemma: should they stand fast for the worship they had led in
France, or accept Anglican ways? and if they did accept
Anglicanism, to what extent? It is demonstrated that many ministers
took the Anglican route, although Volume II will show that the
French communities as a whole, old and new alike, voted with their
feet not to do so. A substantial appendix provides a biographical
account of over 600 ministers in the orbit of the French churches
across this period. Volume II: Settlement, Churches, and the Role
of London 978-1-84519-619-6 (2017); Volume III: The Huguenots and
the Defeat of Louis XIV's France 978-1-84519-620-2 (2020).
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