The Oxford Movement in context. Anglican High Churchmanship,
1700–1857. By Peter
Benedict Nockles. Pp. xvii+342. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1994. £40 (cloth), £15.95 (paper). 0 521 38162 2; 0 521 58719
0
This book, together with subsequent articles on Scotland and
Ireland, contains the fruits of researches which first became
available in Dr Nockles's Oxford DPhil. of 1982, probably the
most widely consulted dissertation on religious developments in
eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Britain since John Walsh's
Cambridge PhD of 1956. The outlines of the argument have been
adumbrated elsewhere, but God (in Nockles's case) resides also in
the
details, and historians will turn to this book for its rich scholarship
and its
staggering mastery of published and unpublished sources. Indeed the
appearance of this definitive study is doubly welcome because, so long
as
it was known to be in the offing, there was a danger that other historians
would be deterred from starting research on the subject of Anglican High
Churchmanship, but now that it is out it will inevitably act as a guide
and
stimulus to further inquiry. Already scholars such as Stewart Brown,
Arthur Burns, Frances Knight, Simon Skinner and Brian Young are
beginning to till the ground. A field which had once seemed high and dry
has been refreshed and made fertile.