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MARC Record from marc_claremont_school_theology

Record ID marc_claremont_school_theology/CSTMARC1_barcode.mrc:30721364:8257
Source marc_claremont_school_theology
Download Link /show-records/marc_claremont_school_theology/CSTMARC1_barcode.mrc:30721364:8257?format=raw

LEADER: 08257cam a2200781 4500
001 ocm00539348
003 OCoLC
005 20200617074716.7
008 721219s1972 enk b 001 0 eng
010 $a 72196402
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035 $a(OCoLC)00539348
043 $ae-uk-en
050 0 $aBX5203.2$b.T48
082 00 $a280/.4$218
084 $a15.70$2bcl
084 $aNP 5700$2rvk
049 $aMAIN
100 1 $aThompson, David Michael,$ecompiler.
245 10 $aNonconformity in the nineteenth century;$cedited by David M. Thompson.
260 $aLondon,$aBoston,$bRoutledge and K. Paul,$c1972.
300 $axiv, 281 pages$c22 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
490 1 $aBirth of modern Britain series
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 275-278).
505 0 $aIntroduction: Old and new dissent; Denominational organisation and expansion; Worship and theology; Nonconformists and the Church of England; Political and social attitudes; Social composition; The Nonconformist contribution -- I. Dissent at the beginning of the nineteenth century : 1. Social composition of Quakers, 1806; 2. The Mow Cop camp meeting, 1807; 3. The Wesleyan conference condemns camp meetings, 1807; 4. Debate on Sidmouth's Protestant dissenting ministers' bill, 1811; 5. William Cobbett on the dissenters, 1811; 6. Toleration Act, 1812; 7. The loyalty of the Wesleyans, 1812; 8. The financial rule in Methodism, 1812; 9. A Quaker's conversion, 1812; 10. The first Baptist Union, 1812; 11. Trinity Act, 1813; 12. Pesecution of primitive Methodists, 1818-19; 13. Plain dress for Methodist preachers, 1819; 14. A Methodist preacher's week, 1819; 15. Nonconformist origins, c.1820; 16. A Methodist class meeting, c. 1822; 17. The 'no smoking' rule in primitive Methodism, 1823; 18. Debates on the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, 1828; 19. The repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, 1828 -- II. Growing confidence: from the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts to factory education, 1828-43: 20. A Methodist view of Catholic emancipation, 1829; 21. Resolutions of the Wesleyan conference on slavery, 1830; 22. Primitive Methodist regulations for camp meetings, 1830; 23. Nonconformity i 'Cowfold', c.1830; 24. A Nonconformist Sunday in the 1830s; 25. A Congregational Sunday school in the 1830s; 26. Aims of the Congregational Union, 1831; 27. Primitive Methodist minute on temperance, 1832; 28. Dissent, the Industrial Revolution and reform, c.1832; 29. The political influence of dissent, 1833; 30. Ordinary chapel folk, c. 1833; 31. The Lady Hewley case, 1833; 32. Declaration on the admission of dissenters to Oxford and Cambridge, 1834; 33. Debates in the House of Commons on church rates, 1834; 34. The expulsion of Rev. J.R. Stephens from the Wesleyan conference, 1834; 35. Revivalism in Sheffield, c.1835; 36. The 'no politics' rule in Methodism, 1835-6; 37. The London Congregational ministers in the 1830s; 38. Church life 8in Prescot, 1937-38; 39. A dissenting academy, 1837-41; 40. Thomas Arnold on dissenters, 1840; 41. The Wesleyan conference on teetotalism, 1841; 42. Edward Miall on the 'grievance' error, 1841; 43. The anti-corn law convention, 1841; 44. Debates on the education clauses of the Factories Bill, 1943; 45. Address of the Wesleyan conference to the societies, 1943 -- III. Starts and stops: from the formation of the anti-state church association to the bicentenary of the great ejectment, 1844-62: 46. Constitution of the anti-state church association, 1844; 47. Two reactions to the anti-state church conference, 1844; 48. A primitive Methodist quarterly meeting, 1845; 49. Working-class nonconformity in the 1840s; 50. Resolutions of the Wesleyan conference on the Maynooth grant, 1845; 51. The 'Fly sheets', no. 4, 1948; 52. The expulsion of the Rev. James Everett from the Wesleyan conference, 1849; 53. Edward Miall criticises Sabbatarianism, 1849; 54. Religion and class, 1849; 55. Mormonism in England, 1849; 56. Mormonism and Methodism, 1849; 57. Report of the census of religious worship, 1851; 58. The Braintree church rates case, 1852; 59. A hostile view of Quakers, 1855; 60. Spurgeon at the Surrey Gardens, 1856; 61. The attraction of dissent, 1858; 62. Nonconformist migrations, 1859; 63. The causes of Quaker decline, 1859; 64. Description of believer's baptism, c.1860; 65. A congregation of Brethren, c.1860; 66. Middle-class nonconformity in the 1860s; 67. The mission of Congregationalists, 1861; 68. The bicent-ary of the great ejectment, 1862; 69. A nonconformist deacon defends the minister against the congregation, 1862 -- IV. The golden age: from the bicentenary to the Home Rule split, 1863-86: 70. Criticism of the voluntary principle, 1868; 71. Matthew Arnold's attack on nonconformity, 1869; 72. Effects of the education act in the countryside, 1870; 73. Edward Miall on disestablishment, 1871; 74. The nonconformist conference on education, 1872; 75. Political consequences of the education controversy for nonconformists, 1870-80; 76. Early days of a primitive Methodist local preacher, 1872; 77. Presbyterians and Sandemanians in London, 1873;78. The effects of emigration, 1873; 79. The effects of the growth of suburbs, 1873; 80. Nonconformists and the Bulgarian massacres, 1876; 81. The Moody and Sankey mission, 1874-75; 82. The mission of primitive Methodism, 1875; 83. Secular and spiritual priorities in Congregationalism, 1876; 84. Rural nonconformity, 1876; 85. The need for church extension, 1876; 86. A service at the Metropolitan Tabernacle, 1878; 87. Condemnation of the government, 1879; 88. Burials Act, 1880; 89. Nonconformity in Bacup, 1883-6; 90. Congregational resolution on economics, 1885; 91. Gladstone, nonconformists and the Liberal party, 1876-86 -- V. Ebb tide: fromt he Home Rule split to the first World War, 1886-1914: 92. R.W. Dale, the Congregational Union and the Irish question, 1888; 93. 'In darkest England', 1890; 94. Hugh Price Hughes and Parnell, 1890; 95. R.W. Dale warns the Birmingham Free church council against political involvement, 1892; 96. Nonconformist losses in the countryside, 1893-6; 97. The Free Church Unity movement, 1897; 98. Hugh Price Hughes on the Boer War, 1900; 99. Programme of a Congregational church mission, c.190; 100. A new suburban church, c.1900; 101. Joseph Chamberlain on the education bill, 1902; 102. Debates on the education bill, 1902; 103. The Free Churches in London, 1903; 104. An attack on political nonconformity, 1909; 105. A nonconformist minister in Parliament, 1910; 106. Epilogue: thanksgiving for victory, 1918.
511 0 $aISBN 0 7100 7275 9 Pbk: 1.50.
590 $bArchive
650 0 $aDissenters, Religious$zEngland$xHistory$vSources.
650 7 $aDissenters, Religious.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00895414
651 7 $aEngland.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01219920
651 7 $aEngland$xChurch history.$2fssh
650 17 $aNon-conformisme.$2gtt
655 4 $aSources.
655 7 $aHistory.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01411628
655 7 $aSources.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01423900
830 0 $aBirth of modern Britain series.
994 $a92$bCST
976 $a10011401975