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Faith in the Town: Lay Religion in Northern England, 1740-1830

Faith in the Town: Lay Religion in Northern England, 1740-1830

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Faith in the Town explores the ways in which religious faith affected the lives of men, women, and children in the increasingly urban and industrialized context of eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century northern England. The picture it presents is one in which faith does not fade away with the growth of towns, but where the new conditions of life allowed for greater religious freedom on the part of the laity. The proliferation of religious services and meetings witnessed in urban centres, as well as the emergence of new forms of working environment and associational culture, meant that towns were home to myriad arenas for the expression, exploration, and inculcation of faith. Within the busy, complex, risky, and opportunity-rich environment of northern towns, faith provided a way to understand the new urban world in which individuals found themselves. It helped make sense of success and failure, marked the passage of time, and could provide a feeling of belonging and purpose. But whilst the new conditions of urban living helped shaped religious faith, faith also acted to influence the development of towns. Faith was not just an internal disposition, but it altered the ways in which individuals acted in the world. This meant that civic identities, understandings of urban space and time, and conceptions of social hierarchies were all affected by the religious faith of individual men, women, and children. In addition, faith helped shape business practices and understandings of the economy, and influenced behaviour in the spheres of work, home and family life.

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DOI: 10.1093/9780198935797.001.0001

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