Memoir of the Life and Episcopate of George Augustus Selwyn, D.D.
This two-volume biography of George Augustus Selwyn (1809–78), the first Anglican bishop of New Zealand, after whom Selwyn College, Cambridge, was later named, was published in 1879. Selwyn was ordained in 1834 and served as curate at Windsor; in 1840, when New Zealand was declared an independent British colony, he was chosen as first bishop of the newly established diocese. The declared aim was to develop an Anglican organisation for the growing European settlement, while resisting too much state control, and by 1857 Selwyn had drafted a constitution for the Church of New Zealand which led eventually to disestablishment. A staunch defender of indigenous rights, he travelled widely throughout New Zealand and the Pacific islands, and subsequently played a leading role in the first Lambeth Conference. In Volume 2, H. W. Tucker describes Selwyn's later ministry, the effect of the Maori Wars, and his final years as bishop of Lichfield.
Product details
December 2011Paperback
9781108039574
406 pages
216 × 140 × 23 mm
0.51kg
2 b/w illus. 1 table
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. New Zealand and England, 1852–4
- 2. New Zealand and Melanesia, 1855–9
- 3. Ecclesiastical organization
- 4. The Maori war
- 5. New Zealand and Lichfield, 1860–7
- 6. Lichfield and New Zealand, 1868–79
- 7. Lichfield, 1871–7
- 8. Principles and convictions
- 9. Last days
- 10. Summary
- Index.