This article explores the relationship between religion and historiography in the work of the historian and bishop William Stubbs (1825–1901). Previous studies of Stubbs have neglected the High-Church influences which demonstrably pervaded his thought, and shaped his ideas of the English past, of the Christian purposes of history, and of the historical process itself. Recovering the confessional bent of Stubbs's approach to the past challenges assumptions about not only academic professionalisation, but also the prevalence through the Victorian period of a ‘Whig interpretation’ of history.</jats:p
About the book: This book provides a new and important expansion of the first four volumes. It cont...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
The quest for an appropriate past was of huge importance in late Tudor and Stuart England. Henry VII...
William Stubbs was among the most learned men of the Victorian age. His life and career exemplified ...
This paper explores the relationship between religion and history in the writings of R.G. Collingwoo...
The history of religion in Britain has been dominated by the concept of secularisation. This suggest...
The theme of this volume, The Church on its Past, was chosen to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary o...
Religion has been a largely overlooked aspect of British history during the First World War. While t...
There are few issues in British history about which so much unsubstantiated assertion has been writt...
About the book: A new and exciting collection of studies that breaks new ground in the history of r...
This paper provides an interim report on the experiences and lessons of Building on History: the Chu...
About the book: This book provides a new and important expansion of the first four volumes. It cont...
This volume makes a significant contribution to the ‘history of ecclesiastical histories’, with a fr...
At the height of the imperial age church people liked to argue that religion and the British empire ...
It is a commonplace in cultural studies that World War I was a watershed event that ushered in the t...
About the book: This book provides a new and important expansion of the first four volumes. It cont...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
The quest for an appropriate past was of huge importance in late Tudor and Stuart England. Henry VII...
William Stubbs was among the most learned men of the Victorian age. His life and career exemplified ...
This paper explores the relationship between religion and history in the writings of R.G. Collingwoo...
The history of religion in Britain has been dominated by the concept of secularisation. This suggest...
The theme of this volume, The Church on its Past, was chosen to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary o...
Religion has been a largely overlooked aspect of British history during the First World War. While t...
There are few issues in British history about which so much unsubstantiated assertion has been writt...
About the book: A new and exciting collection of studies that breaks new ground in the history of r...
This paper provides an interim report on the experiences and lessons of Building on History: the Chu...
About the book: This book provides a new and important expansion of the first four volumes. It cont...
This volume makes a significant contribution to the ‘history of ecclesiastical histories’, with a fr...
At the height of the imperial age church people liked to argue that religion and the British empire ...
It is a commonplace in cultural studies that World War I was a watershed event that ushered in the t...
About the book: This book provides a new and important expansion of the first four volumes. It cont...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
The quest for an appropriate past was of huge importance in late Tudor and Stuart England. Henry VII...