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II. The Social Origins of French and English Bishops in the Eighteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 December 2010

Norman Ravitch
Affiliation:
University of California, Riverside

Extract

The increasing emphasis of historians of the eighteenth century on the role of aristocracy under the old régime justifies looking once again, more carefully, at the upper clergy of the established religious cults. The leaders of the established churches were ex officio, if not also by birth, always members of the aristocracy. No comprehension of the membership, organization, or objectives of the eighteenth-century aristocracy is possible without consideration of its ecclesiastical wing—in the case of episcopal churches, of its bishops.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1965

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References

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8 Documentation of the role of Roche-Aymon, Marbeuf, and Le Franc de Pompignan may be found in the following manuscript sources: Archives du ministère des affaires étrangères, Correspondance politique, Rome, vol. 885, fo. 45; Archives nationales, 01 473, pp. 219 and 378; and Archives du ministère des affaires étrangères, Correspondance politique, Rome, vol. 911, fo. 97.

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15 The phrase ‘by birth’ denotes born in England rather than of English ethnic origin. If one were to consider those whose families were relatively new to Ireland, the non-Irish proportion would be even larger.

16 Data on the family backgrounds of the English bishops have been derived from the following sources: G. E. C[, okayne], The Complete Peerage (London, rev. ed., 1910-1953), 12 vols.Google Scholar; Dictionary of National Biography; Foster, Joseph (ed.), Alumni Oxonienses (1500-1714) (Oxford, 1891), 4 vols.Google Scholar, and Alumni Oxonienses (1715–1886) (London and Oxford, 1888), 4 vols.Google Scholar; Venn, John and Venn, J. A. (eds.), Alumni Cantabrigienses, Part I, From Earliest Times to 1751 (Cambridge, 1922-7), 4 vols.Google Scholar; Venn, J. A. (ed.), Alumni Cantabrigienses, Part II, 1752-1900 (Cambridge, 1940-1951), 4 volsGoogle Scholar.

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18 The sources for the family backgrounds of the Irish bishops are the same as those for the English, with the addition of Burtchaell, George Dames and Sadleir, Thomas Ulick (eds.), Alumni Dublinenses (London, 1924)Google Scholar.

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22 Estimates of the non-conformist Protestant population of England in the late eighteenth century may be found in Fryer, C. E., ‘The Numerical Decline of Dissent in England Previous to the Industrial Revolution’, The American Journal of Theology, XVII (1913), 239Google Scholar. An estimate placing the Catholic population of England in the late eighteenth century at 48,000 is cited by Williams, Basil, The Whig Supremacy 1714-1760 (Oxford, 1939), p. 67Google Scholar. Estimates of the Protestant Population of France is given in Poland, Burdette C., French Protestantism and the French Revolution (Princeton, 1957), p. 8CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

23 Op. cit. 1, 147-8.

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