Article contents
The Political Apprenticeship of Benjamin Hoadly
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
Although nothing approaching the number of words written by Benjamin Hoadly during the eighty-five years of life has been written about him in the 185 years since his death—still, the contentious Bishop has been by no means neglected by historians of eighteenth century England. Hoadly's peculiar position with respect to the Established Church has been dissected out of the complicated anatomy of the Bangorian controversy. His major political treatises have been screened to reveal original contributions to political theory—with largely negative results. His remarkable and rapid climb up the ladder of preferment after the accession of George I, when the Whigs once more prevailed in ministerial and parlimentary positions, has been generally interpreted as payment for substantial services rendered. However, so far as the writer is aware, the preliminary establishment of Benjamin Hoadly's right to Whig patronage has not received detailed consideration.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © American Society of Church History 1947
References
1 Sykes, Norman, “Benjamin Hoadiy, Bishop of Bangor,” in The Social and Politcal Ideas of Some English Thinkers of the Augustan Age, Hearnshaw, P. J. C., editor (London, 1928), 118.Google Scholar
2 Ibid., 119.
3 Cassan, Stephen Hyde, The Lives of the Bishops of Winchester from Berinus, the First Bishop of the West Saxons to the Present Time, 2 vols. (London, ca. 1823), II, 227–228.Google Scholar
4 Hoadly, John, The Works of Benjamin Hoadly (London, 1773), I, 20–27.Google Scholar
5 Norman Sykes, “Hoadly,” 123.
6 Hoadly, John, The Works, II, 103–108.Google Scholar
7 Norman Sykes, “Hoadly,” 132–133.
8 Hoadly, John, The Works, II, 18–25.Google Scholar
9 Norman Sykes, “Hoadly,” 131.
10 Loc. cit.
11 Hoadly, John, The Works, II, 109–117.Google Scholar
12 Ibid., II, 118–125.
13 Ibid., II, 136–137.
14 Ibid., II, 177–178.
15 Stephen, Leslie, History of English Thought in the 18th Century (3rd ed., London, 1902), II, 154.Google Scholar
16 Hoadly, John, The Works, I, ix.Google Scholar
17 Loc. cit.
18 Loc. cit.
19 Morgan, William Thomas, English Political Parties and Leaders in the Reign of Queen Anne (New Haven, 1920), 163–164.Google Scholar
20 Ibid., 388–392.
21 Hoadly, John, The Works, I, xiii.Google Scholar
22 Ibid., II, 615.
23 Ibid., II, 622.
24 Ibid., II, 641–642.
25 Ibid., II, 686–688.
26 Ibid., II, 602–603.
27 Ibid., II, 608–609.
- 3
- Cited by