The Oxford Handbook of the Oxford Movement
Herausgeber: Brown, Stewart J.; Pereiro, James; Nockles, Peter
The Oxford Handbook of the Oxford Movement
Herausgeber: Brown, Stewart J.; Pereiro, James; Nockles, Peter
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It considers the origins of the Oxford Movement; the key personalities, ideas, and events of the Movement itself in the years 1833-1845; the continuation of the Movement after Newman's conversion to Roman Catholicism; and the wider influence of the Movement beyond both Oxford and the British Isles and into the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
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It considers the origins of the Oxford Movement; the key personalities, ideas, and events of the Movement itself in the years 1833-1845; the continuation of the Movement after Newman's conversion to Roman Catholicism; and the wider influence of the Movement beyond both Oxford and the British Isles and into the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Oxford Handbooks in Religion and Theology
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 608
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. August 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 173mm x 46mm
- Gewicht: 1322g
- ISBN-13: 9780199580187
- ISBN-10: 0199580189
- Artikelnr.: 47865977
- Oxford Handbooks in Religion and Theology
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 608
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. August 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 249mm x 173mm x 46mm
- Gewicht: 1322g
- ISBN-13: 9780199580187
- ISBN-10: 0199580189
- Artikelnr.: 47865977
Stewart J. Brown is Professor of Ecclesiastical History at the University of Edinburgh. He has lectured widely in Europe, China, Australia, India, and the USA, and is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. He served as co-editor of the Scottish Historical Review from 1993 to 1999. His publications include The Oxford Movement: Europe and the Wider World 1830-1930 (Cambridge University Press, 2014) and The National Churches of England, Ireland, and Scotland 1801-46 (Oxford University Press, 2001). Peter B. Nockles was formerly a Librarian and Curator, Rare Books & Maps, Special Collections, the John Rylands Library, University of Manchester, and a one-time Visiting Fellow at Oriel College, Oxford. He is an Honorary Research Fellow, School of Arts, Languages & Cultures, University of Manchester. He is the author of The Oxford Movement in Context (1994) and co-edited with Stewart J. Brown, The Oxford Movement: Europe and the Wider World 1830-1930 (2012). He was a contributor to a History of Canterbury Cathedral (1995), to volume 6 of the History of the University of Oxford (1997), to Oriel College: A History (2013), and to Receptions of Newman (ed. Frederick D. Aquino and Benjamin J. King, 2015). James Pereiro is a Research Fellow in the University of Navarra. He is a member of Oxford University History Faculty and has published extensively on nineteenth-century ecclesiastical history. He is the author of Ethos' and the Oxford Movement: At the Heart of Tractarianism (Oxford University Press, 2007) and Theories of Development in the Oxford Movement (Gracewing Publishing, 2015).
* List of contributors
* Introduction
* Part I: Origins and Contexts
* 1: Andrew Starkie: The Legacy of the Caroline Divines, Restoration,
the Emergence of the High Church Tradition
* 2: Richard Sharp: The Communion of the Primitive Church a High
Churchmen in England c. 1710-60
* 3: Grayson Carter: The Evangelical Background
* 4: Nigel Aston: High Church Presence and Persistence in the Reign of
George III (1760-1811)
* 5: Stephen Prickett: Tractarianism and the Lake Poets
* 6: Peter B. Nockles: Pre-Tractarian Oxford: Oriel and the Noetics
* Part II: The Movement s Spring and Summer
* 7: Sheridan Gilley: Keble, Froude, Newman, and Pusey
* 8: James Pereiro: A Cloud of Witnesses: Tractarians and Tractarian
Ventures
* 9: Peter B. Nockles: Conflicts in Oxford: Subscription and Admission
of Dissenters, Hampden Controversy, University Reform
* 10: Austin Cooper: The Tracts for the Times
* 11: Kenneth L. Parker: Tractarian Visions of History
* 12: Andrew Atherstone: Protestant Reactions: Oxford, 1838-1846
* Part III: The Theology of the Oxford Movement
* 13: James Pereiro: The Oxford Movement s Theory of Religious
Knowledge
* 14: James Pereiro: Tradition and Development
* 15: Geoffrey Rowell: The Ecclesiology of the Oxford Movement
* 16: Timothy Larsen: Scripture and Biblical Interpretation
* 17: Peter C. Erb: Justification and Sanctification in the Oxford
Movement
* 18: George Westhaver: Mysticism and Sacramentalism in the Oxford
Movement
* 19: John Boneham: Tractarian Theology in Verse and Sermon
* Part IV: The Crisis 1841-1845
* 20: Simon Skinner: The British Critic: Newman and Mozley, Oakley and
Ward
* 21: Michael J. G. Pahls and Kenneth L. Parker: Tract 90: Newman's
Last Stand or a Bold New Venture?
* 22: Sheridan Gilley: Newman's Anglican Death Bed: Littlemore and
Conversions to Rome
* Part V: Cultural Expressions, Transmissions and Influences
* 23: Simon Skinner: Social and Political Commentary
* 24: George Herring: The Parishes
* 25: Peter Doll: The Architectural Impact of the Oxford Movement
* 26: Barry A. Orford: Music and Hymnody
* 27: Carol Engelhardt Herringer: The Revival of the Religious Life:
The Sisterhoods
* 28: George Herring: Devotional and Liturgical Renewal: Ritualism and
Protestant Reaction
* 29: Kirstie Blair: The influence of the Oxford Movement on Poetry and
Fiction
* 30: Elizabeth Ludlow: Christina Rossetti and the Pre-Raphaelites
* Part VI: Beyond England
* 31: Stewart J. Brown: Ireland, Wales, and Scotland
* 32: Albrecht Geck: The Oxford Movement in Europe
* 33: Daniel Handschy: Eucharistic Ecclesiology: The Oxford Movement
and the American Episcopal Church
* 34: Rowan Strong: The Oxford Movement and Missions
* 35: Mark D. Chapman: Oxford Movement and Ecumenism
* Part VII: Into the Twentieth Century
* 36: William Davage: The Congress Movement: The High Watermark of
Anglo-Catholicism
* 37: John Maiden: The Prayer Book Controversy
* 38: Barry Spurr: The Twentieth-Century Literary Tradition
* Part VIII: Reflections, Receptions and Retrospectives
* 39: James Pereiro: Did the Oxford Movement die in 1851?
* 40: Kenneth E. Macnab: Reconsidering the Movement: Pusey, Keble and
Marriott. Tractarian Responses to their Separated Brethren
* 41: Jeremy Morris: Liberalism Protestant and Catholic
* 42: Peter B. Nockles: Histories and Anti-Histories
* Afterword: Colin Podmore: The Oxford Movement Today: The Things that
Remain
* Introduction
* Part I: Origins and Contexts
* 1: Andrew Starkie: The Legacy of the Caroline Divines, Restoration,
the Emergence of the High Church Tradition
* 2: Richard Sharp: The Communion of the Primitive Church a High
Churchmen in England c. 1710-60
* 3: Grayson Carter: The Evangelical Background
* 4: Nigel Aston: High Church Presence and Persistence in the Reign of
George III (1760-1811)
* 5: Stephen Prickett: Tractarianism and the Lake Poets
* 6: Peter B. Nockles: Pre-Tractarian Oxford: Oriel and the Noetics
* Part II: The Movement s Spring and Summer
* 7: Sheridan Gilley: Keble, Froude, Newman, and Pusey
* 8: James Pereiro: A Cloud of Witnesses: Tractarians and Tractarian
Ventures
* 9: Peter B. Nockles: Conflicts in Oxford: Subscription and Admission
of Dissenters, Hampden Controversy, University Reform
* 10: Austin Cooper: The Tracts for the Times
* 11: Kenneth L. Parker: Tractarian Visions of History
* 12: Andrew Atherstone: Protestant Reactions: Oxford, 1838-1846
* Part III: The Theology of the Oxford Movement
* 13: James Pereiro: The Oxford Movement s Theory of Religious
Knowledge
* 14: James Pereiro: Tradition and Development
* 15: Geoffrey Rowell: The Ecclesiology of the Oxford Movement
* 16: Timothy Larsen: Scripture and Biblical Interpretation
* 17: Peter C. Erb: Justification and Sanctification in the Oxford
Movement
* 18: George Westhaver: Mysticism and Sacramentalism in the Oxford
Movement
* 19: John Boneham: Tractarian Theology in Verse and Sermon
* Part IV: The Crisis 1841-1845
* 20: Simon Skinner: The British Critic: Newman and Mozley, Oakley and
Ward
* 21: Michael J. G. Pahls and Kenneth L. Parker: Tract 90: Newman's
Last Stand or a Bold New Venture?
* 22: Sheridan Gilley: Newman's Anglican Death Bed: Littlemore and
Conversions to Rome
* Part V: Cultural Expressions, Transmissions and Influences
* 23: Simon Skinner: Social and Political Commentary
* 24: George Herring: The Parishes
* 25: Peter Doll: The Architectural Impact of the Oxford Movement
* 26: Barry A. Orford: Music and Hymnody
* 27: Carol Engelhardt Herringer: The Revival of the Religious Life:
The Sisterhoods
* 28: George Herring: Devotional and Liturgical Renewal: Ritualism and
Protestant Reaction
* 29: Kirstie Blair: The influence of the Oxford Movement on Poetry and
Fiction
* 30: Elizabeth Ludlow: Christina Rossetti and the Pre-Raphaelites
* Part VI: Beyond England
* 31: Stewart J. Brown: Ireland, Wales, and Scotland
* 32: Albrecht Geck: The Oxford Movement in Europe
* 33: Daniel Handschy: Eucharistic Ecclesiology: The Oxford Movement
and the American Episcopal Church
* 34: Rowan Strong: The Oxford Movement and Missions
* 35: Mark D. Chapman: Oxford Movement and Ecumenism
* Part VII: Into the Twentieth Century
* 36: William Davage: The Congress Movement: The High Watermark of
Anglo-Catholicism
* 37: John Maiden: The Prayer Book Controversy
* 38: Barry Spurr: The Twentieth-Century Literary Tradition
* Part VIII: Reflections, Receptions and Retrospectives
* 39: James Pereiro: Did the Oxford Movement die in 1851?
* 40: Kenneth E. Macnab: Reconsidering the Movement: Pusey, Keble and
Marriott. Tractarian Responses to their Separated Brethren
* 41: Jeremy Morris: Liberalism Protestant and Catholic
* 42: Peter B. Nockles: Histories and Anti-Histories
* Afterword: Colin Podmore: The Oxford Movement Today: The Things that
Remain
* List of contributors
* Introduction
* Part I: Origins and Contexts
* 1: Andrew Starkie: The Legacy of the Caroline Divines, Restoration,
the Emergence of the High Church Tradition
* 2: Richard Sharp: The Communion of the Primitive Church a High
Churchmen in England c. 1710-60
* 3: Grayson Carter: The Evangelical Background
* 4: Nigel Aston: High Church Presence and Persistence in the Reign of
George III (1760-1811)
* 5: Stephen Prickett: Tractarianism and the Lake Poets
* 6: Peter B. Nockles: Pre-Tractarian Oxford: Oriel and the Noetics
* Part II: The Movement s Spring and Summer
* 7: Sheridan Gilley: Keble, Froude, Newman, and Pusey
* 8: James Pereiro: A Cloud of Witnesses: Tractarians and Tractarian
Ventures
* 9: Peter B. Nockles: Conflicts in Oxford: Subscription and Admission
of Dissenters, Hampden Controversy, University Reform
* 10: Austin Cooper: The Tracts for the Times
* 11: Kenneth L. Parker: Tractarian Visions of History
* 12: Andrew Atherstone: Protestant Reactions: Oxford, 1838-1846
* Part III: The Theology of the Oxford Movement
* 13: James Pereiro: The Oxford Movement s Theory of Religious
Knowledge
* 14: James Pereiro: Tradition and Development
* 15: Geoffrey Rowell: The Ecclesiology of the Oxford Movement
* 16: Timothy Larsen: Scripture and Biblical Interpretation
* 17: Peter C. Erb: Justification and Sanctification in the Oxford
Movement
* 18: George Westhaver: Mysticism and Sacramentalism in the Oxford
Movement
* 19: John Boneham: Tractarian Theology in Verse and Sermon
* Part IV: The Crisis 1841-1845
* 20: Simon Skinner: The British Critic: Newman and Mozley, Oakley and
Ward
* 21: Michael J. G. Pahls and Kenneth L. Parker: Tract 90: Newman's
Last Stand or a Bold New Venture?
* 22: Sheridan Gilley: Newman's Anglican Death Bed: Littlemore and
Conversions to Rome
* Part V: Cultural Expressions, Transmissions and Influences
* 23: Simon Skinner: Social and Political Commentary
* 24: George Herring: The Parishes
* 25: Peter Doll: The Architectural Impact of the Oxford Movement
* 26: Barry A. Orford: Music and Hymnody
* 27: Carol Engelhardt Herringer: The Revival of the Religious Life:
The Sisterhoods
* 28: George Herring: Devotional and Liturgical Renewal: Ritualism and
Protestant Reaction
* 29: Kirstie Blair: The influence of the Oxford Movement on Poetry and
Fiction
* 30: Elizabeth Ludlow: Christina Rossetti and the Pre-Raphaelites
* Part VI: Beyond England
* 31: Stewart J. Brown: Ireland, Wales, and Scotland
* 32: Albrecht Geck: The Oxford Movement in Europe
* 33: Daniel Handschy: Eucharistic Ecclesiology: The Oxford Movement
and the American Episcopal Church
* 34: Rowan Strong: The Oxford Movement and Missions
* 35: Mark D. Chapman: Oxford Movement and Ecumenism
* Part VII: Into the Twentieth Century
* 36: William Davage: The Congress Movement: The High Watermark of
Anglo-Catholicism
* 37: John Maiden: The Prayer Book Controversy
* 38: Barry Spurr: The Twentieth-Century Literary Tradition
* Part VIII: Reflections, Receptions and Retrospectives
* 39: James Pereiro: Did the Oxford Movement die in 1851?
* 40: Kenneth E. Macnab: Reconsidering the Movement: Pusey, Keble and
Marriott. Tractarian Responses to their Separated Brethren
* 41: Jeremy Morris: Liberalism Protestant and Catholic
* 42: Peter B. Nockles: Histories and Anti-Histories
* Afterword: Colin Podmore: The Oxford Movement Today: The Things that
Remain
* Introduction
* Part I: Origins and Contexts
* 1: Andrew Starkie: The Legacy of the Caroline Divines, Restoration,
the Emergence of the High Church Tradition
* 2: Richard Sharp: The Communion of the Primitive Church a High
Churchmen in England c. 1710-60
* 3: Grayson Carter: The Evangelical Background
* 4: Nigel Aston: High Church Presence and Persistence in the Reign of
George III (1760-1811)
* 5: Stephen Prickett: Tractarianism and the Lake Poets
* 6: Peter B. Nockles: Pre-Tractarian Oxford: Oriel and the Noetics
* Part II: The Movement s Spring and Summer
* 7: Sheridan Gilley: Keble, Froude, Newman, and Pusey
* 8: James Pereiro: A Cloud of Witnesses: Tractarians and Tractarian
Ventures
* 9: Peter B. Nockles: Conflicts in Oxford: Subscription and Admission
of Dissenters, Hampden Controversy, University Reform
* 10: Austin Cooper: The Tracts for the Times
* 11: Kenneth L. Parker: Tractarian Visions of History
* 12: Andrew Atherstone: Protestant Reactions: Oxford, 1838-1846
* Part III: The Theology of the Oxford Movement
* 13: James Pereiro: The Oxford Movement s Theory of Religious
Knowledge
* 14: James Pereiro: Tradition and Development
* 15: Geoffrey Rowell: The Ecclesiology of the Oxford Movement
* 16: Timothy Larsen: Scripture and Biblical Interpretation
* 17: Peter C. Erb: Justification and Sanctification in the Oxford
Movement
* 18: George Westhaver: Mysticism and Sacramentalism in the Oxford
Movement
* 19: John Boneham: Tractarian Theology in Verse and Sermon
* Part IV: The Crisis 1841-1845
* 20: Simon Skinner: The British Critic: Newman and Mozley, Oakley and
Ward
* 21: Michael J. G. Pahls and Kenneth L. Parker: Tract 90: Newman's
Last Stand or a Bold New Venture?
* 22: Sheridan Gilley: Newman's Anglican Death Bed: Littlemore and
Conversions to Rome
* Part V: Cultural Expressions, Transmissions and Influences
* 23: Simon Skinner: Social and Political Commentary
* 24: George Herring: The Parishes
* 25: Peter Doll: The Architectural Impact of the Oxford Movement
* 26: Barry A. Orford: Music and Hymnody
* 27: Carol Engelhardt Herringer: The Revival of the Religious Life:
The Sisterhoods
* 28: George Herring: Devotional and Liturgical Renewal: Ritualism and
Protestant Reaction
* 29: Kirstie Blair: The influence of the Oxford Movement on Poetry and
Fiction
* 30: Elizabeth Ludlow: Christina Rossetti and the Pre-Raphaelites
* Part VI: Beyond England
* 31: Stewart J. Brown: Ireland, Wales, and Scotland
* 32: Albrecht Geck: The Oxford Movement in Europe
* 33: Daniel Handschy: Eucharistic Ecclesiology: The Oxford Movement
and the American Episcopal Church
* 34: Rowan Strong: The Oxford Movement and Missions
* 35: Mark D. Chapman: Oxford Movement and Ecumenism
* Part VII: Into the Twentieth Century
* 36: William Davage: The Congress Movement: The High Watermark of
Anglo-Catholicism
* 37: John Maiden: The Prayer Book Controversy
* 38: Barry Spurr: The Twentieth-Century Literary Tradition
* Part VIII: Reflections, Receptions and Retrospectives
* 39: James Pereiro: Did the Oxford Movement die in 1851?
* 40: Kenneth E. Macnab: Reconsidering the Movement: Pusey, Keble and
Marriott. Tractarian Responses to their Separated Brethren
* 41: Jeremy Morris: Liberalism Protestant and Catholic
* 42: Peter B. Nockles: Histories and Anti-Histories
* Afterword: Colin Podmore: The Oxford Movement Today: The Things that
Remain