Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Protestant Dissent in Wales
View through CrossRef
Wales was once perceived as a ‘nation of Nonconformists’, but immediately after the Glorious Revolution, Dissenters represented a tiny minority of the Welsh population. One of the roots of later Dissenting success can be found in the disproportionate contribution that Welsh Dissenters made to Welsh-language print culture in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. In addition, the growth of a ‘circulating’ school system helped spread literacy (and the Word) to the younger generation. Although begun by Griffith Jones, rector of Llanddowror, the episcopal hierarchy remained sceptical of movements that crossed parish boundaries. This was also true of Methodism. The impact of revival in Wales was considerable. Initially, much of the support was derived from Methodists, although Calvinistic Methodism was initially much stronger than Wesleyan Methodism in the country—it was only in the early nineteenth century that Wesleyan Methodism began to enjoy more success.
Title: Protestant Dissent in Wales
Description:
Wales was once perceived as a ‘nation of Nonconformists’, but immediately after the Glorious Revolution, Dissenters represented a tiny minority of the Welsh population.
One of the roots of later Dissenting success can be found in the disproportionate contribution that Welsh Dissenters made to Welsh-language print culture in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.
In addition, the growth of a ‘circulating’ school system helped spread literacy (and the Word) to the younger generation.
Although begun by Griffith Jones, rector of Llanddowror, the episcopal hierarchy remained sceptical of movements that crossed parish boundaries.
This was also true of Methodism.
The impact of revival in Wales was considerable.
Initially, much of the support was derived from Methodists, although Calvinistic Methodism was initially much stronger than Wesleyan Methodism in the country—it was only in the early nineteenth century that Wesleyan Methodism began to enjoy more success.
Related Results
The Sixteenth Century1485-1603
The Sixteenth Century1485-1603
Abstract
This volume explores the transformation of the British Isles in the sixteenth century. England was an effectively governed monarchy, but its authority was n...
Religious Change in the Mid-Tudor Period
Religious Change in the Mid-Tudor Period
Mid-sixteenth-century England witnessed unprecedented religio-political turmoil. Following the death of Henry VIII in 1547, the government of Edward VI fostered a controversial pro...
Edmund Spenser
Edmund Spenser
This chapter outlines some of the key features of Elizabethan Protestantism relevant for Spenser’s work and goes on to consider both their importance as themes in his poetry, and t...
The Anger and Energy of Gary Mitchell
The Anger and Energy of Gary Mitchell
Born and brought up on the overwhelmingly Protestant Rathcoole housing estate, Gary Mitchell explored the fragmentation of Ulster Loyalism during the era of the peace process in hi...
1868 to 1872
1868 to 1872
As the federal government established reservations across the American West, Protestant leaders argued that they were best suited to run them. Quakers, especially, claimed that Ame...
‘Come ye out from among them, and be ye separate’
‘Come ye out from among them, and be ye separate’
After 1660 John Bunyan’s publications articulated and enacted a conscientious dissent from, and opposition to, the religious and, to a degree, the political, authorities of the res...
The Asian collections
The Asian collections
Art Gallery of New South Wales., Art, 2003, Art Gallery of New South Whales...


