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  • - PART TWO sections seven to fourteen. VOLUME THREE
    av Roger Lee Brown
    330,-

  • - PART TWO sections seven to fourteen. VOLUME TWO
    av Roger Lee Brown
    320,-

  • - PART TWO sections seven to fourteen. VOLUME ONE
    av Roger Lee Brown
    330,-

  • av Roger Lee Brown
    330,-

    Part Three of A SOCIAL HISTORY OF THE WELSH CLERGY contains two sections, on the domestic position of the clergy and on the parsonage house. The study relates to the four Welsh dioceses of the Church of England then in the Province of Canterbury. The first section notes how clerical duty changed over the centuries, becoming more pastorally orientated, and using case studies notes how clergy "worked" their parishes. Reference is made to the numerous visitation charges and sermons which addressed this issue. Note is made of the idle, neglectful and unworthy clergy, and another chapter describes their external lifestyle, noting the sporting, masonic, academic clergy in particular. Further chapters describe the clerical families, their wives, including those who controlled their husbands' parishes, their children and their servants. The final section relates to the parson's house, noting the lack of or deplorable state of much of the housing in the 18th century, the concerns expressed about this state of affairs, especially by bishops, as the lack of a house often led to pluralism and absenteeism, and the remedies put forward, especially the use of mortgages through Queen Anne's Bounty. This, often accompanied by a gradual increase in the wealth of parishes through the enclosure movement, enabled the so-called great rebuilding of the parsonage houses in the late eighteenth century and onwards. This was assisted by the work of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners who, with the Bounty, demanded a certain size and style of house which was often impractical and expensive to maintain in the poorer Welsh parishes. Again, case studies indicate how these parsonage houses were financed, and the considerable problems which occurred due to a lack of finance or difficulties with builders. A final chapter looks at the dilapidation procedures, by which a parsonage house was required to be put in good order by the retiring incumbent and his estate. This was a cause of considerable hardship in numerous cases, and attempts to alleviate the difficulties were not entirely successful. The three parts of the study, of which another three will be shortly made available, indicate all too clearly that the lot of the parson in Georgian and Victorian times was never the golden age that many assume it was.

  • - PART ONE sections one to six. VOLUME TWO
    av Roger Lee Brown
    330,-

    Part Two of A SOCIAL HISTORY OF THE WELSH CLERGY contains two sections, on Patronage and on the Income of the Clergy. The study relates to the four Welsh dioceses of the Church of England then in the Province of Canterbury. Patronage, or the right of appointing to a living, was often a source of great grievance for the clergy who desired a living of their own or a better living. Patronage was held by bishops, colleges, the Crown and the Lord Chancellor, as well as by numerous lay persons. This right was frequently abused. English-speaking clergy were appointed to Welsh-speaking parishes, though legislation later enabled bishops to refuse such appointments; nepotism prevailed, especially in the case of bishops and their relations; while livings could be sold or the next presentation sold, for which a sordid but lucrative market existed. Numerous case studies indicate the difficulties of those men, who lacking influence, endeavoured to obtain a parish of their own, and a significant minority never did so. The second section discusses the income of the beneficed clergy. Some parishes were wealthy, others pathetically poor, leading to a plurality of neighbouring parishes. Outgoings against income could be substantial. Many parishes had glebe land, farmed by the incumbent or let out, and some parishes benefited considerably by the enclosure movement increasing this glebe land. The income from the tithe varied considerably, was often subject to dispute, and was governed by local arrangements before it was commuted to a money payment. The fall in tithe income due to the agricultural depression of the 1870s, leading to further disputes and even the riots is fully documented. The augmentations made by Queen Anne's Bounty are fully noted, while the grants of the Ecclesiastical Commission to populous parishes in augmenting the stipend and the many difficulties of obtaining this assistance, receive chapters of their own, as do the other sources of finance, such as diocesan initiatives.

  • - PART ONE sections one to six. VOLUME ONE
    av Roger Lee Brown
    330,-

    Part one of A SOCIAL HISTORY OF THE WELSH CLERGY contains two sections, namely "The Route to Ordination" and "The Inferior Clergy". The first section describes the dilemma faced by the four Welsh dioceses of the Church of England, then part of the Province of Canterbury. The Church was impoverished, the native Welsh speakers (required for a Welsh-speaking Church) unable to afford a university education, and by the 19th century Nonconformity had made many inroads into the religious life of the nation. A substantial number of those ordained came from Nonconformist backgrounds, many from the counties of Cardiganshire and Carmarthenshire, and were educated in the divinity departments of grammar schools, enabling them to sit the bishops' examinations for ordination. Eventually St David's College, Lampeter, was opened to replace these schools and to provide a systematic training, though it was not without its critics. A number of other men were trained elsewhere in theological colleges and at the historic universities. The wider Church eventually imposed more professional standards of training. The last chapter describes the bishops' examinations, often held during the week before the actual ordination, so that some men were plucked at the last minute, and the generally carefree way in which ordinations were held. The second section, on the inferior clergy or curates, distinguishes between the perpetual curate, who served a parish whose main income went to a lay impropriator, and the stipendiary curate, who served for an absentee incumbent. Many of these men served as pluralists, and were poverty-stricken. By the early 19th century legislation brought about reform and ended these abuses, while a new breed of curate was becoming common, namely the assistant curate serving under a resident incumbent. The difficulties of their position, such as insecurity of tenure, are documented with numerous examples.

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