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Geoffrey Fisher's was such a significant archiepiscopate. Moreover, Fisher represents one major way of fulfilling his office: in this case, the archbishop as administrator. This title presents his portrait.
This book explores Archbishop Fisher¿s influence on major contemporary issues and events, including divorce-law reform, capital punishment at home, the end of Empire and the most dangerous years of the Cold War abroad. This new biography establishes the continuing significance not only of the office of Archbishop in the Church but also of the Church at large in the tumultuous world of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Geoffrey Fisher's was such a significant archiepiscopate. Moreover, Fisher represents one major way of fulfilling his office: in this case, the archbishop as administrator. This title presents his portrait.
This book explores Archbishop Fisher¿s influence on major contemporary issues and events, including divorce-law reform, capital punishment at home, the end of Empire and the most dangerous years of the Cold War abroad. This new biography establishes the continuing significance not only of the office of Archbishop in the Church but also of the Church at large in the tumultuous world of the later twentieth century. A final section of original source material includes letters, sermons and other writings bringing vividly to life the range and character of Fisher's public and private role.
Autorenporträt
Andrew Chandler had published widely in the field of twentieth-century British and European history, with particular reference to the Church of England. His book, The Church of England in the Twentieth Century: The Church Commisioners and the Politics of Reform, was published in 2006. David Hein is a widely published scholar and an authority on Anglican and US history in the nineteenth and late twentieth centuries. His first, widely praised study of Archbishop Fisher was published in 2007