Saturday 28th September 2024
St Alban’s Centre, Leigh Place, Baldwin’s Gardens, London EC1N 7AB
The 1829 Catholic Emancipation Act marked a major stage in the liberalisation of religious policy in the United Kingdom of Britain and Ireland. For the first time, Christian dissenters, both Roman Catholic and Protestant, were able openly to worship according to their beliefs and consciences, without incurring social or political disabilities. The following century witnessed the proliferation of places of worship as different denominations came out of the shadows, sought to accommodate existing congregations and attempted to cater for a rapidly increasing population. Denominations, and even some branches of single Churches, were in competition for members and used their buildings both to make their presence felt and to differentiate themselves from their rivals. This conference will explore some of the manifestations of this phenomenon in England, Wales and Ireland, and, in so doing, will open a window into a religious culture radically different from that of present-day inter-denominational co-operation and sharing of premises.
09.30 Coffee
10.00 Welcome
10.10 Building for the Emerging Market in Religion Paul Barnwell (University of Oxford)
11.00 Free Trade, Competition, or Professional Amour Propre? A Chapel Perspective Clyde Binfield (University of Sheffield)
11.50 Coffee
12.10 Keeping up with the Joneses: Inter- and Extra-Denominational Rivalry in Chapel Building in Wales Christian Tucker-Williams (Baptist Union of Wales)
13.00 Lunch
14.00 Citius, Altius, Fortius: Post-Emancipation Catholic Church-building in the North of England Stephen Withnell (University of Oxford)
14.50 ‘They’ll have churches not chapels/ their rising pride grapples/ to dub their priests rectors/ despite all correctors’. Toleration, Tensions, and Ecclesiastical Architecture in Post-Emancipation Ireland Niamh NicGhabhann (University of Limerick)
15.40 Tea
16.00 Mission to the ‘Godless suburbs’: The Church of England and Inter-Denominational Rivalry in Interwar Church Building Clare Price (Church of England)
16.50 Close
Cost
£55 for members of the Chapels Society and of the Ecclesiological Society and their guests; £65 for non-members. Prices include refreshments and lunch.
Please book here
Tickets are non-refundable.
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