Religion and Reproduction among English Dissenters: Gloucestershire Baptists in the Demographic Revolution
In: Comparative studies in society and history, Volume 33, Issue 3, p. 511-527
Abstract
The growth of English Nonconformity during the era of the demographic revolution (circa1750–1850) has long been regarded as an impediment to the reconstruction of reproductive behavior. Historical demographers have relied heavily on Church of England registers of baptisms, burials, and marriages, while treating Protestant dissenters from the Church of England secondarily, as a factor of underestimation in the Anglican record. Such treatment suggests that religious culture played no independent role in determining population growth. This assumption seems problematic, however, considering the central role that social historians have assigned evangelical dissent to the emergence of modern English society and the somewhat greater place that religion has occupied in demographic studies of populations in continental Europe, the United States, and the third world.
Languages
English
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
ISSN: 1475-2999
DOI
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