The Passing
of Barchester
Clive Dewey
Tractarians and Evangelicals, the extremists
of the nineteenth-century church, have successfully imposed their propaganda
on posterity. Every text assumes that these militants saved the Church
of England from the slough of complacency and corruption that their most
powerful enemies - 'high and dry' dignitaries - had created.
This book rehabilitates the bishops and deans who are commonly supposed to have lavished preferment on unworthy friends and relations. It shows how members of the Hackney Phalanx, the high-church equivalent of the Clapham Sect, used their patronage to co-opt the able and energetic sons of rising business and professional families: ordinands with the talent and ambition to make a substantial contribution to the church from families that might have otherwise been lost to dissent. A single clerical connection, of nine related clergymen revolving round a mid nineteenth-century Dean of Canterbury, William Rowe Lyall (1788-1857), illuminates a number of central features of church and society: patronage; the co-option of new men; and the attraction of the church as a professional career.
This exceptionally readable book contains
vivid pen-portraits of Dean Lyall and his clients, rigorous economic analysis
of the financial returns of a clerical career.
'It deals with every kind of question
for which I personally require an answer!' Asa Briggs
236 pages 1991 51 illus
1 85285 039 6 Cased £25.00
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |