The Silent Revolution and the Making of Victorian EnglandOhio State University Press, 2000 - Всего страниц: 405 Herbert Schlossberg argues that by the time Victoria became queen in 1837, Victorian culture was already essentially in place. Focusing on the period between the 1790s and the 1840s, Schlossberg shows how the religious revival that took hold of England's culture in the early years of the 19th century constituted a silent revolution - as opposed to the violent political revolutions taking place in France and other European countries - that formed the basis of Victorian culture. Among other effects, this revolution effectively addressed the dislocation brought about by rapid economic change and population growth, which were producing strains in the already shaky moral and religious foundation of the English nation. |
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... eighteenth century acknowledges that degree requirements were " farcical ... a joke even to contemporaries , " with the graduates for the most part remaining ignorant . One candidate for a Cambridge doctorate was caught off guard at ...
... eighteenth century acknowledges that degree requirements were " farcical ... a joke even to contemporaries , " with the graduates for the most part remaining ignorant . One candidate for a Cambridge doctorate was caught off guard at ...
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Herbert Schlossberg. wrote in a letter that the Dissenters of the seventeenth century had been more serious Christians than their counterparts in the Church . But in the eighteenth century they had turned to Socinianism ( the common term ...
Herbert Schlossberg. wrote in a letter that the Dissenters of the seventeenth century had been more serious Christians than their counterparts in the Church . But in the eighteenth century they had turned to Socinianism ( the common term ...
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... eighteenth century and for some time afterwards , which is the point Gladstone was making . When Wilberforce wrote his Practical View in 1797 , it was not to persuade the skeptic to mend his ways but rather to " point out the scanty and ...
... eighteenth century and for some time afterwards , which is the point Gladstone was making . When Wilberforce wrote his Practical View in 1797 , it was not to persuade the skeptic to mend his ways but rather to " point out the scanty and ...
Содержание
THE GEORGIAN SLIDE | 13 |
FIRST BOUNCE | 28 |
Charles Simeon | 40 |
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The Silent Revolution and the Making of Victorian England Herbert Schlossberg Ограниченный просмотр - 2000 |
The Silent Revolution and the Making of Victorian England Herbert Schlossberg Недоступно для просмотра - 2000 |
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Anglican antinomianism became believed Bentham Bible biblical bishops called Calvinist Cambridge Univ Carlyle Catholic Chadwick chapel Charles Simeon Christ Christian Observer Church of England Churchmen Clapham classes clergy clergymen Coleridge Coleridge's common contemporary criticism culture Dickens Dissenters doctrine effect eighteenth century English Establishment Evangelical Movement example faith Francis Place Froude gelical George Gladstone gospel Hannah Henry High Church human Ibid ideas influence John Henry Newman John Keble John Stuart Mill Kay-Shuttleworth Keble later leaders living London Lord ment Methodists minister modern moral nation Newman nineteenth century novels Oxford Movement Oxford Univ parish period political poor preachers preaching Press Puritan radical Record reform religion religious revival Revolution scholar seemed sermons social society Southey spiritual Sunday schools teaching theology thinking Thomas Arnold thought tion Tractarian movement tracts utilitarians Victorian Wesley William Holman Hunt William Wilberforce writings wrote York