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John Henry Williams (1747-1829): `Political Clergyman'

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John Henry Williams was the vicar of Wellesbourne in south Warwickshire from 1778 until his death some fifty years later. A dedicated pastor, displaying an `enlightened and liberal' outlook, his career illuminates the Church of England's condition in the period, and also a clergyman's place in local society. However, he was not merely a country parson. A `political clergyman', Williams engaged fervently in both provincial and national political debate, denouncing the war with revolutionary France between 1793 and 1802, and published a series of forceful sermons condemning the struggle on Christian principles. To opponents, he appeared insidious and blinkered, but to admirers he was 'a sound divine, and not a less sound politician'.

This book, the first to examine Williams' career in full, is a detailed, vivid, and sometimes moving, study of a man who occupies an honorable and significant position in the Church of England's history and in the history of British peace campaigning.

Dr COLIN HAYDON teaches in the Department of History at the University of Winchester.

Reviews

Will give [readers] a better understanding of the interaction between local and national affairs, and between faith and politics, in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century England. HISTORY

Details

First Published: 15 Nov 2007
13 Digit ISBN: 9781843833307
Pages: 192
Size: 23.4 x 15.6
Binding: Hardback
Imprint: Boydell Press
Series: Studies in Modern British Religious History
Subject: Modern History
BIC Class: HBLL

Details updated on 08 Feb 2012

Contents

  • 1  The Grave and the Memory
  • 2  The Formative Years
  • 3  The Ivy-mantled Tow'r: Parish and Pastoralia
  • 4  The Gathering Storm
  • 5  By Far the Heaviest of All Earthly Calamities: Williams' Anti-War Sermons
  • 6  Anxiety, the 1797 Campaign, and Afterwards
  • 7  Assessment
  • 8  Bibliography
  • 9  Index