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A quiet revolution runs through this book, revealing how the Anglican establishment shaped lives, loyalties, and dissent in eighteenth-century England. A lucid, humane study that invites both care and curiosity. This historical monograph offers a concise, sustained exploration of church governance, reform, and the interplay between religion and society in Georgian Britain. It treats the Anglican church not as relic, but as a living framework-an anglican establishment and reform in dialogue with dissent and nonconformity-helping readers see how doctrine, policy, and practice intersected in everyday life. For students of ecclesiastical history and academic library readers alike, the text stands as a rigorous yet accessible anglican church governance study, balancing close analysis with broad context. It is equally at home on the shelf of the casual reader and the classic-literature collector, who values a well-made historical companion. The book's literary and historical significance rests in its careful reconstruction of a complex era, offering fresh perspectives for those studying eighteenth century England and religion's role in social change. Not merely a reprint, this edition is a restored cultural treasure, designed for today's scholars and future generations. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions, it is more than a reprint-it is a collector's item, a testament to enduring scholarship and to the enduring story of the church in a pivotal century. This title will resonate with fans of comparable anglican history works and with anyone charting the currents of religious life in eighteenth-century England.
The authors Charles John Abbey and John Henry Overton were prominent Anglican clergymen and church historians of the 19th century, best known for their joint standard work *The English Church in the Eighteenth Century* (1878).