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10 - The disciplining of the religious conscience in nineteenth-century British politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Jonathan Parry
Affiliation:
Professor of Modern British History, University of Cambridge
Ira Katznelson
Affiliation:
Columbia University, New York
Gareth Stedman Jones
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The most important variable in the relationship between religion and politics in modern British history has not been the strength of religion but the strength of politics. The key question is not the extent of ‘secularisation’ at any one time – which is fortunate, given how tricky and unstable a concept it is. Religion has not played as destabilising a role in British mainland politics over the last two centuries as it has in some other countries. But it does not follow that religion has been a marginal influence in a ‘secular’ political culture. This chapter argues that, on the contrary, religion has often been a major theme in politics, certainly in the nineteenth century. However, religious disagreements were confined and muted by political processes. In Britain, the religious conscience was disciplined to accept the legitimacy and primacy of political institutions, even while it remained vibrant within the broader public culture.

Most prominent in asserting a religious conscience were evangelical Protestant Dissenters, for whom opposition to state support for religion was a basic principle. As soon as the political reforms of 1828–32 gave them a national political presence, they started agitating against the requirement to pay rates for the upkeep of the local Anglican Church, their exclusion from Oxford and Cambridge universities, and the existence of the Anglican Church establishment itself in England, Wales and Ireland.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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