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E-raamat: Protestant Dissent and Philanthropy in Britain, 1660-1914

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This collection examines the contribution made by Dissenters from the Church of England to the history and development of charity and philanthropy in Britain from 1660 to the beginning of the twentieth century. It looks at the importance of charity and philanthropy in supporting Protestant Dissent and the causes with which it was associated; the part charity and philanthropy played in helping to fashion a self-identity for Dissent and for individual denominations; and the distinctive contributions made both by Dissenters generally and by particular denominations. Dissent and philanthropy intersect at many different points and levels: between the public and the private, the state and the individual, the voluntary and the organized. Philanthropy was an essential feature of the relationship between Dissent and the society from which it sometimes felt itself to be separate. Each chapter not only covers the contribution of a particular denomination but forms a case study of a wider aspect of charitable or philanthropic activity within Dissent as a whole. This volume is the first study which examines the contribution of Dissenters to charity and philanthropy, one of the most important developments in British society between the Restoration of Charles II and the outbreak of the First World War.

CLYDE BINFIELD is Emeritus Professor in History at the University of Sheffield. His publications have concentrated on nonconformist history, in particular its social, cultural, and political contexts, from the late eighteenth century to the mid twentieth century. G. M. DITCHFIELD is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Kent. His publications include
The Evangelical Revival, George III. An Essay in Monarchy, and The Letters of Theophilus Lindsey (1723-1808). DAVID L. WYKES is Director of Dr Williams's Trust and Library. He edited Parliament and Dissent with Stephen Taylor and, with Isabel Rivers, Joseph Priestley, Scientist, Philosopher, and Theologian and Dissenting Praise.

CONTRIBUTORS: Clyde Binfield, John Briggs, Hugh Cunningham, G. M. Ditchfield, Jennifer Farooq, Mark Freeman, Elizabeth Gow, David Jeremy, Stephen Orchard, Alan Ruston, David L. Wykes


Philanthropy was an essential feature of the relationship between Dissent and the society from which it sometimes felt itself to be separate.

This collection examines the contribution made by Dissenters from the Church of England to the history and development of charity and philanthropy in Britain from 1660 to the beginning of the twentieth century. It looks at the importance of charity and philanthropy in supporting Protestant Dissent and the causes with which it was associated; the part charity and philanthropy played in helping to fashion a self-identity for Dissent and for individual denominations; and the distinctive contributions made both by Dissenters generally and by particular denominations. Dissent and philanthropy intersect at many different points and levels: between the public and the private, the state and the individual, the voluntary and the organized. Philanthropy was an essential feature of the relationship between Dissent and the society from which it sometimes felt itself to be separate. Each chapter not only covers the contribution of a particular denomination but forms a case study of a wider aspect of charitable or philanthropic activity within Dissent as a whole. This volume is the first study which examines the contribution of Dissenters to charity and philanthropy, one of the most important developments in British society between the Restoration of Charles II and the outbreak of the First World War.

CLYDE BINFIELD is Emeritus Professor in History at the University of Sheffield. His publications have concentrated on nonconformist history, in particular its social, cultural, and political contexts, from the late eighteenth century to the mid twentieth century. G. M. DITCHFIELD is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Kent. His publications include The Evangelical Revival, George III. An Essay in Monarchy, and The Letters of Theophilus Lindsey (1723-1808). DAVID L. WYKES is Director of Dr Williams's Trust and Library. He edited Parliament and Dissent with Stephen Taylor and, with Isabel Rivers, Joseph Priestley, Scientist, Philosopher, and Theologian and Dissenting Praise.

CONTRIBUTORS: Clyde Binfield, John Briggs, Hugh Cunningham, G. M. Ditchfield, Jennifer Farooq, Mark Freeman, Elizabeth Gow, David Jeremy, Stephen Orchard, Alan Ruston, David L. Wykes

This collection examines the contribution made by Dissenters from the Church of England to the history and development of charity and philanthropy in Britain from 1660 to the beginning of the twentieth century. It looks at the importance of charity and philanthropy in supporting Protestant Dissent and the causes with which it was associated; the part charity and philanthropy played in helping to fashion a self-identity for Dissent and for individual denominations; and the distinctive contributions made both by Dissenters generally and by particular denominations. Dissent and philanthropy intersect at many different points and levels: between the public and the private, the state and the individual, the voluntary and the organized. Philanthropy was an essential feature of the relationship between Dissent and the society from which it sometimes felt itself to be separate. Each chapter not only covers the contribution of a particular denomination but forms a case study of a wider aspect of charitable or philanthropic activity within Dissent as a whole. This volume is the first study which examines the contribution of Dissenters to charity and philanthropy, one of the most important developments in British society between the Restoration of Charles II and the outbreak of the First World War.

CLYDE BINFIELD is Emeritus Professor in History at the University of Sheffield. His publications have concentrated on nonconformist history, in particular its social, cultural, and political contexts, from the late eighteenth century to the mid twentieth century. G. M. DITCHFIELD is Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Kent. His publications include The Evangelical Revival, George III. An Essay in Monarchy, and The Letters of Theophilus Lindsey (1723-1808). DAVID L. WYKES is Director of Dr Williams's Trust and Library. He edited Parliament and Dissent with Stephen Taylor and, with Isabel Rivers, Joseph Priestley, Scientist, Philosopher, and Theologian and Dissenting Praise.

CONTRIBUTORS: Clyde Binfield, John Briggs, Hugh Cunningham, G. M. Ditchfield, Jennifer Farooq, Mark Freeman, Elizabeth Gow, David Jeremy, Stephen Orchard, Alan Ruston, David L. Wykes

Arvustused

[ This book] presents a range of valuable perspectives on the development of Protestant Dissent over a significant period, and the place that philanthropy had to play within that development. * THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE WESLEY HISTORICAL SOCIETY * [ An] important study of a surprisingly neglected subject. * JOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY, LITERATURE AND CULTURE * [ This] book is a clearly written and a fully researched account of Dissenting life and practise, in an area that has hitherto not been systematically considered in depth by historians. -- TRANSACTIONS OF THE UNITARIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY Scholarly and illuminating * WESLEY AND METHODIST STUDIES * This is an extremely well-edited volume, more than the sum of its parts; each essay has a clear problematic, with always lucid, frequently lively, and occasionally very moving, narratives - and with valuable, well-labelled, conclusions. -- JOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY This is a ground-breaking collection on a curiously overlooked subject, setting out extraordinary acts of munificence and some exceptional Dissenters. * CONGREGATIONAL HISTORY SOCIETY MAGAZINE *

List of Illustrations and Tables
viii
List of Contributors
ix
Acknowledgements xi
List of Abbreviations
xiii
The Editors Introduction
1(222)
1 Dissent and Charity, 1660--1720
27(16)
David L. Wykes
2 Dissenters and Charity Sermons, c. 1700 to 1750
43(17)
Jennifer Farooq
3 John Howard, Dissent and the Early Years of Philanthropy in Britain
60(18)
Hugh Cunningham
4 Rational Philanthropy: Theory and Practice in the Emergence of British Unitarianism, c. 1750--1820
78(17)
G. M. Ditchfield
5 David Nasmith (1799--1839), Philanthropy Expressed as Campaigning
95(18)
Stephen Orchard
6 Building Philanthropy: The Example of Joshua Wilson (1795--1874
113(16)
Clyde Binfield
7 Funding Faith: Early Victorian Wesleyan Philanthropy
129(23)
David J. Jeremy
8 Unitarians and Philanthropy After 1844: the Formation of a Denominational Identity
152(17)
Alan Ruston
David L. Wykes
9 Children and Orphans: Some Nonconformist Responses to the Vulnerable in Victorian Britain
169(18)
John Briggs
10 The Rowntree Family and the Evolution of Quaker Philanthropy, c. 1880 to c. 1920
187(18)
Mark Freeman
11 `Not slothful in business': Enriqueta Rylands and the John Rylands Library
205(18)
Elizabeth Gow
Select Bibliography 223(8)
Index 231