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William Robertson (1721-1793) was a leading historical figure of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment. He was one of the triumvirate of historians, along with David Hume and Edward Gibbon, who profoundly shaped the European consciousness. William Robertson and the Expansion of Empire contains contributions from a number of distinguished historians and literary scholars who explore aspects of Robertson's intellectual achievements. Particular attention is paid to Robertson's treatment of the theme of empire and European expansion.
A new and wide-ranging study of Christianity in Scotland, from the
eighteenth century to the present.The contributors include D. W. D.
Shaw, Ian Campbell, Kenneth Fielding, William Ferguson, Barbara
MacHaffie, Peter Matheson, John McCaffrey, Owen Chadwick, David
Thompson, Keith Robbins, Andrew Ross, Stewart J. Brown and George
Newlands.Topics encompass varieties of unbelief, challenges to the
Westminster confession, John Baillie, Queen Victoria and the Church
of Scotland, the Scottish ecumenical movement, the disestablishment
movement, and Presbyterian-Catholic relations.
The Oxford Movement transformed the nineteenth-century Church of
England with a renewed conception of itself as a spiritual body.
Initiated in the early 1830s by members of the University of
Oxford, it was a response to threats to the established Church
posed by British Dissenters, Irish Catholics, Whig and Radical
politicians, and the predominant evangelical ethos - what Newman
called 'the religion of the day'. The Tractarians believed they
were not simply addressing difficulties within their national
Church, but recovering universal principles of the Christian faith.
To what extent were their beliefs and ideals communicated globally?
Was missionary activity the product of the movement's distinctive
principles? Did their understanding of the Church promote, or
inhibit, closer relations among the churches of the global Anglican
Communion? This volume addresses these questions and more with a
series of case studies involving Europe and the English-speaking
world during the first century of the Movement.
W. T. Stead (1849-1912) was a newspaper editor, author, social
reformer, advocate for women rights, peace campaigner,
spiritualist, and one of the best-known public figures in the late
Victorian and Edwardian Britain. W. T. Stead: Nonconformist and
Newspaper Prophet provides a compelling religious biography of
Stead, offering particular attention to his conception of
journalism-in an age of growing mass literacy-as a means to
communicate religious truth and morality, and his view of the
editor's desk as a modern pulpit. Leading scholar, Stewart J. Brown
explores how his Nonconformist Conscience and sense of divine
calling infused Stead's newspaper crusades-most famously his
'Maiden Tribute' campaign against child prostitution. The biography
also examines Stead's growing interest in spiritualism and the
occult, as he searched for the evidence of an afterlife that might
draw people in a more secular age back to faith. It discusses his
imperialism and his belief in the English-speaking peoples of the
British Empire and American Republic as God's new chosen people for
the spread of civilisation; and it highlights how his growing
understanding of other faiths and cultures-but more especially his
moral revulsion over the South African War of 1899-1902-brought him
to question those beliefs. Finally, it assesses the influence of
religious faith on his campaigns for world peace and the
arbitration of international disputes.
The book provides a comparative study of the national Churches of England, Ireland, and Scotland: the Churches established by law to instruct the people and serve as guardians of the nation's faith. It traces the end of the confessional State idea in the United Kingdom from 1801 to 1846, and explores the movements to assert the spiritual independence of the Churches from State control.
The Oxford Handbook of the Oxford Movement reflects the rich and
diverse nature of scholarship on the Oxford Movement and provides
pointers to further study and new lines of enquiry. Part I
considers the origins and historical context of the Oxford
Movement. These chapters include studies of the legacy of the
seventeenth-century 'Caroline Divines' and of the nature and
influence of the eighteenth and early nineteenth-century High
Church movement within the Church of England. Part II focuses on
the beginnings and early years of the Oxford Movement, paying
particular attention to the people, the distinctive Oxford context,
and the ecclesiastical controversies that inspired the birth of the
Movement and its early intellectual and religious expressions. In
Part III the theme shifts from early history of the Oxford Movement
to its distinctive theological developments. This section analyses
Tractarian views of religious knowledge and the notion of 'ethos';
the distinctive Tractarian views of tradition and development; and
Tractarian ecclesiology, including ideas of the via media and the
'branch theory' of the Church. The years of crisis for the Oxford
Movement between 1841 and 1845, including John Henry Newman's
departure from the Church of England, are covered in Part IV. Part
V then proceeds to a consideration of the broader cultural
expressions and influences of the Oxford Movement. Part VI focuses
on the world outside England and examines the profound impact of
the Oxford Movement on Churches beyond the English heartland, as
well as on the formation of a world-wide Anglicanism. In Part VII,
the contributors show how the Oxford Movement remained a vital
force in the twentieth century, finding expression in the
Anglo-Catholic Congresses and in the Prayer Book Controversy of the
1920s within the Church of England. The Handbook draws to a close,
in Part VIII, with a set of more generalised reflections on the
impact of the Oxford Movement, including chapters on the judgement
of the converts to Roman Catholicism over the Movement's loss of
its original character, on the spiritual life and efforts of those
who remained within the Anglican Church to keep Tractarian ideas
alive, on the engagement of the Movement with Liberal Protestantism
and Liberal Catholicism, and on the often contentious
historiography of the Oxford Movement which continued to be a
source of church party division as late as the centennial
commemorations of the Movement in 1933. An 'Afterword' chapter
assesses the continuing influence of the Oxford Movement in the
world Anglican Communion today, with special references to some of
the conflicts and controversies that have shaken Anglicanism since
the 1960s.
During the tumultuous period of world history from 1660 to 1815,
three complex movements combined to bring a fundamental cultural
reorientation to Europe and North America, and ultimately to the
wider world. The Enlightenment transformed views of nature and of
the human capacity to master nature. The religious reawakenings
brought a revival of heart-felt, experiential Christianity. Finally
revolution, the political and social upheavals of the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, challenged established
ideas of divine-right monarchies and divinely ordained social
hierarchies, and promoted more democratic government, notions of
human rights and religious toleration. A new religious climate
emerged, in which people were more likely to look to their own
feelings and experiences for the basis of their faith. During this
same period, Christianity spread widely around the world as a
result of colonialism and missions, and responded in diverse ways
to its encounters with other cultures and religious traditions.
The British state between the mid-seventeenth century to the early
twentieth century was essentially a Christian state. Christianity
permeated society, defining the rites of passage - baptism, first
communion, marriage and burial - that shaped individual lives,
providing a sense of continuity between past, present and future
generations, and informing social institutions and voluntary
associations. Yet this religious conception of state and society
was also the source of conflict. The Restoration of the monarchy in
1660 brought limited toleration for Protestant Dissenters, who felt
unable to worship in the established Church, and there were
challenges to faith raised by biblical and historical scholarship,
science, moral questioning and social dislocations and unrest. This
book brings together a distinguished team of authors who explore
the interactions of religion, politics and culture that shaped and
defined modern Britain. They consider expressions of civic
consciousness in the expanding towns and cities, the growth of
Welsh national identity, movements for popular education and
temperance reform, and the influence of organised sport, popular
journalism, and historical writing in defining national life. Most
importantly, the contributors highlight the vital role of religious
faith and religious institutions in the understanding of the modern
British state.
'The Church and Empire', the theme of Studies in Church History,
54, reflects the reality that from its beginnings, the Christian
Church has had close, often symbiotic, relationships with empires
and imperial power. Initially the Church engaged with the Roman
Empire, subsequently in Europe with the Carolingian, Anglo-Norman,
Genoese, Venetian and Holy Roman Empires, and later - through the
Church's global expansion with European empires in the Americas,
Africa and Asia - the Spanish, Dutch, French and British empires,
and the imperial structures it encountered there. Bringing together
the work of twenty-four historians, this volume explores the
relations of churches and empires, and Christian conceptions of
empire, in the ancient, medieval, early modern and modern periods,
as well as the role of empire in the global expansion of
Christianity.
During the tumultuous period of world history from 1660 to 1815,
three complex movements combined to bring a fundamental cultural
reorientation to Europe and North America, and ultimately to the
wider world. The Enlightenment transformed views of nature and of
the human capacity to master nature. The religious reawakenings
brought a revival of heart-felt, experiential Christianity. Finally
revolution, the political and social upheavals of the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, challenged established
ideas of divine-right monarchies and divinely ordained social
hierarchies, and promoted more democratic government, notions of
human rights and religious toleration. A new religious climate
emerged, in which people were more likely to look to their own
feelings and experiences for the basis of their faith. During this
same period, Christianity spread widely around the world as a
result of colonialism and missions, and responded in diverse ways
to its encounters with other cultures and religious traditions.
William Robertson (1721-1793) was a leading historical figure of
the eighteenth-century Enlightenment and one of the triumvirate of
historians, along with David Hume and Edward Gibbon, who profoundly
shaped the European consciousness. His great histories of Scotland,
Europe, America and India represented a steadily expanding vision
of European and world history. It was a 'grand narrative'
comprising the emergence of Britain, the development of the
European system of independent nation states, the growth of the
European empire in the Americas, and the beginnings of the European
empire in India. This book, William Robertson and the Expansion of
Empire, contains contributions from a number of distinguished
historians and literary scholars who explore aspects of Robertson's
intellectual achievements. However, particular attention is paid to
Robertson's treatment of the theme of empire and European
expansion.
The Oxford Movement transformed the nineteenth-century Church of
England with a renewed conception of itself as a spiritual body.
Initiated in the early 1830s by members of the University of
Oxford, it was a response to threats to the established Church
posed by British Dissenters, Irish Catholics, Whig and Radical
politicians, and the predominant evangelical ethos - what Newman
called 'the religion of the day'. The Tractarians believed they
were not simply addressing difficulties within their national
Church, but recovering universal principles of the Christian faith.
To what extent were their beliefs and ideals communicated globally?
Was missionary activity the product of the movement's distinctive
principles? Did their understanding of the Church promote, or
inhibit, closer relations among the churches of the global Anglican
Communion? This volume addresses these questions and more with a
series of case studies involving Europe and the English-speaking
world during the first century of the Movement.
This volume, in honour of the great historian Emmet Larkin, is
organized around the two themes that have shaped his work on the
Catholic Church in modern Ireland -- the role of the church in the
creation of the modern Irish state, and the role of the church in
defining a distinctive Irish national identity through the
"devotional revolution". The various chapters explore different
themes -- political, social, ecclesiastical, and literary -- but
are united by their common engagement with aspects of Larkin's work
on Irish culture and consciousness between the late eighteenth
century and the present.
This collection brings together a series of papers that in May 2007
were presented at a Royal Society of Edinburgh conference organised
to mark the 300th anniversary of the Union of 1707. One of the
guiding objectives of the RSE event was to showcase the work of
younger historians, and to present new work that would provide
fresh insights on this defining moment in Scotland's (and the
United Kingdom's) history. The seven chapters range widely, in
content and coverage, from a detailed study of how the Church of
Scotland viewed union and how concerns about the Kirk influenced
the voting behaviour in the Scottish Parliament, through to the
often overlooked broader European context in which the British
parliamentary union - only one form of new state formation in the
early modern period - was forged. The global War of the Spanish
Succession, it is cogently argued, influenced both the timing and
shape of the British union. Also examined are elite thinking and
public opinion on fundamental questions such as Scottish nationhood
and the place and powers of monarchs, as well as burning issues of
the time such as the Company of Scotland, and trade. Other topics
include an investigation of the particular intellectual
characteristics of the Scots, a product of the pre-Union
educational system, which it is argued enabled professionals and
entrepreneurs in Scotland to meet the challenges posed by the 1707
settlement. As one of the contributors argues, union offered the
Scots only partial openings within the empire.
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