An Anglican British world
The Church of England and the expansion of the settler empire, c. 17901860
By (author) Joseph Hardwick

Publication date:
30 September 2014Length of book:
296 pagesPublisher
Manchester University PressDimensions:
234x156mmISBN-13: 9780719087226
This book looks at how that oft-maligned institution, the Anglican Church, coped with mass migration from Britain in the first half of the nineteenth century. The book details the great array of institutions, voluntary societies and inter-colonial networks that furnished the Church with the men and money that enabled it to sustain a common institutional structure and a common set of beliefs across a rapidly-expanding ‘British world’. It also sheds light on how this institutional context contributed to the formation of colonial Churches with distinctive features and identities. One of the book’s key aims is to show how the colonial Church should be of interest to more than just scholars and students of religious and Church history. The colonial Church was an institution that played a vital role in the formation of political publics and ethnic communities in a settler empire that was being remoulded by the advent of mass migration, democracy and the separation of Church and State.
‘Joseph Hardwick’s study of the imperial growth of a national church is an illuminating and important addition to nineteenth-century imperial and ecclesiastical historiography.’
Jacob M. Blosser, Texas Woman’s University , Anglican and Episcopal History