Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN: | 0585376476 9780585376479 9780521657112 0521657113 9780521453356 0521453356 0521657113 0521453356
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Notes: | Includes bibliographical references (pages 212-221) and index. English. Print version record.
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Summary: | This is the first study to consider the meaning of Anglicanism for ordinary people in nineteenth-century England. Drawing extensively on unpublished sources, particularly those for rural areas, Frances Knight analyses the beliefs and practices of lay Anglicans and of the clergy who ministered to them. Building on arguments that the Church of England was in transition from state church to denomination, she argues that strong continuities with the past nevertheless remained. Through an examination of denominational identity, personal piety, Sunday church-going, and Anglican rites of passage she shows that the Church continued to cater for the beliefs and values of many Christians. Far from becoming a minority sect, the Anglican Church in the mid-Victorian period continued to claim the allegiance of one in four English people.
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Other form: | Print version: Knight, Frances. Nineteenth-century church and English society. Cambridge, U.K. ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1995 0521657113
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