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Full Description
The fifteen essays in this volume cover a number of common themes in the religious and social history of Northern Europe since the Reformation. They include work from Britain, Holland, France and Germany exemplifying the growing collaboration between scholars in different parts of Europe and a desire to achieve an international dimension in historical studies. Topics range from the broad 18th Century Sermons and the Age to the specific Archbishop Laud and the Walloons in Canterbury. All examine aspects of Church history in the context of a wider society.Contributors:LLEWELLYN BOGAERS, HUGH BOUDIN, ANNE OAKLEY, NIGEL YATES, W.M. JACOB, W.R. WARD, VIVIANE BARRIE-CURIEN, FRANCOIS DECONINCK-BROSSARD, HANS OTTE, NIGEL ASTON, DAVID BEBBINGTON, YVES MARIE HILAIRE, CLYDE BINFIELD, STEWART BROWN, IAN MACHIN
Contents
Utrecht at the crossroads - religious affiliations in a 16th-century Netherlandish city, Llewellyn Bogaers; Protestant bankers and financiers in Belgium - Max Weber revisited, Hugh Boudin; Archbishop Laud and the Walloons in Canterbury, Anne Oakley; unity in diversity - attitudes to the liturgical arrangement of church buildings between the late-17th and early-19th centuries, Nigel Yates; church and borough - King's Lynn, 1700-1750, W.M. Jacob; Anglicanism and assimilation or mysticism and mayhem in the 18th century, W.R. Ward; clerical recruitment and career patterns in the Church of England during the 18th century, Viviane Barrie-Curien; 18th-century sermons and the age, Francoise Deconinck-Brossard; Christian poor relief between Enlightenment and Revival in the cities of northern Germany, Hans Otte; the Dean of Canterbury and the sage of Ferney - George Horne looks at Voltaire, Nigel Aston; holiness in 19th-century British Methodism, David Bebbington; catholicisme politique ou catholicisme social? reflexions sur le mouvement religieux des laics, 1860-1914, Yves-Marie Hilaire; a working memorial? the encasing of Paisley's Baptists, Clyde Binfield; the campaign for the Christian commonwealth in Scotland, 1919-1939, Stewart J. Brown; british churches and moral change in the 1960s, Ian Machin.