Church and State in Old and New Worlds
Biographical note
Hilary M. Carey is a professor of history at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Life Fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge and former Keith Cameron Professor of Australian History at University College Dublin. Her most recent books are God’s Empire: Religion and Colonialism in the British World (Cambridge University Press, 2010), and the edited collection God’s Empire (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008). She also conducts research on this history of medieval astrology.
John Gascoigne took his PhD at the University of Cambridge in 1981 and is a professor of history at the University of New South Wales, Sydney. He is a former editor of the Journal of Religious History and his publications have dealt with the relations between science, religion and the Enlightenment. His most recent book, Captain Cook: Voyager between Worlds (Continuum, 2007), reflects his increasing interest in the history of exploration and culture contact in the age of the Enlightenment.
Contributors include John Gascoigne, Jared van Duinen, David Garrioch, John Moses, Stewart Jay Brown, David Cahill, Hilary Carey, Rowan Strong, Frank Lambert, John Stenhouse, John Murphy and Bruce Kaye.
John Gascoigne took his PhD at the University of Cambridge in 1981 and is a professor of history at the University of New South Wales, Sydney. He is a former editor of the Journal of Religious History and his publications have dealt with the relations between science, religion and the Enlightenment. His most recent book, Captain Cook: Voyager between Worlds (Continuum, 2007), reflects his increasing interest in the history of exploration and culture contact in the age of the Enlightenment.
Contributors include John Gascoigne, Jared van Duinen, David Garrioch, John Moses, Stewart Jay Brown, David Cahill, Hilary Carey, Rowan Strong, Frank Lambert, John Stenhouse, John Murphy and Bruce Kaye.
Readership
All those interested in church-state relations, the history of religious institutions from the Middle Ages to the present and the consequences of European expansion and settlement in a global setting
Reviews
“A powerful and essential foundation for anyone wishing to understand the emergence of post-colonial churches … thoughtful and erudite.”
Philip Jenkins, Baylor University. In: Church History, Vol. 81, No. 3 (September 2012), p. 696.
Philip Jenkins, Baylor University. In: Church History, Vol. 81, No. 3 (September 2012), p. 696.
Table of contents
Preface
Notes on contributors
Introduction:The rise and fall of Christendom
John Gascoigne and Hilary M. Carey
Part I: Old Worlds
The ironies of English Erastianism: Puritanism and the outbreak of the English Civil Wars
Jared van Duinen
The Protestant problem and church–state relations in Old Regime France
David Garrioch
Church and state in post-Reformation Germany, 1530-1914
John A. Moses
The broad church movement, national culture, and the established Churches of Great Britain, c. 1850-c. 1900
Stewart J. Brown
Part II: Imperial States
The crisis of ecclesiastical privilege in Spain and Spanish America: The question of insurgent clergy, 1780-1820
David Cahill
Gladstone, the colonial Church, and imperial state
Hilary M. Carey
The Church of England and the British imperial state: Anglican metropolitan sermons of the 1850s
Rowan Strong
Part III: New Worlds
Debating the US church–state boundary, then and now: Virginia as a case study
Frank Lambert
Church and state in New Zealand, 1835-1870: Religion, politics, and race
John Stenhouse
Church and state in the history of Australian welfare
John Murphy
From Anglican gaol to religious pluralism: Re-casting Anglican views of church and state in Australia
Bruce Kaye
Select Bibliography
Index
Notes on contributors
Introduction:The rise and fall of Christendom
John Gascoigne and Hilary M. Carey
Part I: Old Worlds
The ironies of English Erastianism: Puritanism and the outbreak of the English Civil Wars
Jared van Duinen
The Protestant problem and church–state relations in Old Regime France
David Garrioch
Church and state in post-Reformation Germany, 1530-1914
John A. Moses
The broad church movement, national culture, and the established Churches of Great Britain, c. 1850-c. 1900
Stewart J. Brown
Part II: Imperial States
The crisis of ecclesiastical privilege in Spain and Spanish America: The question of insurgent clergy, 1780-1820
David Cahill
Gladstone, the colonial Church, and imperial state
Hilary M. Carey
The Church of England and the British imperial state: Anglican metropolitan sermons of the 1850s
Rowan Strong
Part III: New Worlds
Debating the US church–state boundary, then and now: Virginia as a case study
Frank Lambert
Church and state in New Zealand, 1835-1870: Religion, politics, and race
John Stenhouse
Church and state in the history of Australian welfare
John Murphy
From Anglican gaol to religious pluralism: Re-casting Anglican views of church and state in Australia
Bruce Kaye
Select Bibliography
Index
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