This study follows on from Yate's standard work Buildings, Faith and Worship: the Liturgical Arrangement of Anglican Churches 1600-1900 (OUP 1991, revised edition 2000) and Liturgical Space in Western Europe since the Reformation (Ashgate, 2008) to provide the first detailed study of Scottish post-Reformation church interiors for fifty years. In the intervening period many of the buildings described by George Hay have been demolished, converted to non-ecclesiastical use or liturgically reordered. However, this study goes further to include many surviving examples not noted by Hay, and extends his work further into the nineteenth century, with a detailed study of buildings up to 1860, and with a more general consideration of later nineteenth and early twentieth century church architecture in Scotland. The detailed study of developments in Scotland, especially those in the Presbyterian churches, are set in the context of comparative developments in other parts of Britain and Europe, especially those in the Reformed churches of the Netherlands and Switzerland to create a groundbreaking new study by an established author.



Autorentext

Nigel Yates is Professor of Ecclesiastical History, University of Wales, Lampeter, UK. Previous books include Anglican Ritualism in Victorian Britain 1830-1910 (1999), Buildings, Faith and Worship: the Liturgical Arrangement of Anglican Churches 1600-1900 (revised edition 2000), The Religious Condition of Ireland 1770-1850 (2006) and Liturgical Space in Western Europe since the Reformation (forthcoming 2008).



Zusammenfassung
This study follows on from Yate's standard work Buildings, Faith and Worship: the Liturgical Arrangement of Anglican Churches 1600-1900 (OUP 1991, revised edition 2000) and Liturgical Space in Western Europe since the Reformation (Ashgate, 2008) to provide the first detailed study of Scottish post-Reformation church interiors for fifty years. In the intervening period many of the buildings described by George Hay have been demolished, converted to non-ecclesiastical use or liturgically reordered. However, this study goes further to include many surviving examples not noted by Hay, and extends his work further into the nineteenth century, with a detailed study of buildings up to 1860, and with a more general consideration of later nineteenth and early twentieth century church architecture in Scotland. The detailed study of developments in Scotland, especially those in the Presbyterian churches, are set in the context of comparative developments in other parts of Britain and Europe, especially those in the Reformed churches of the Netherlands and Switzerland to create a groundbreaking new study by an established author.

Inhalt

Introduction
1. The Scottish Reformation and its Aftermath
2. Scottish Church Interiors 1560-1690
3. Presbyterian Church Interiors 1690-1860: Worship and the Care of Buildings
4. Presbyterian Church Interiors 1690-1860: Furnishings and Liturgical Arrangement
5. Roman Catholic and Episcopalian Church Interiors 1690-1860
6. Liturgical and Architectural Developments since 1860
Appendices:
A. Extracts from the First Statistical Account of Scotland (1791-9) relating to the condition of churches
B. Churches with substantially complete pre-1843 furnishings listed by George Hay: an update
C. Examples of substantially unaltered interiors of Scottish churches built before 1860
D. Select list of Scottish churches with traditional Presbyterian interiors of a date later than 1860
E. Select list of Scoto-Catholic Protestant church interiors in Scotland

Titel
Preaching, Word and Sacrament
Untertitel
Scottish Church Interiors 1560-1860
EAN
9780567107336
ISBN
978-0-567-10733-6
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Herausgeber
Veröffentlichung
12.02.2009
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
2.94 MB
Anzahl Seiten
224
Jahr
2009
Untertitel
Englisch