Abstract
Anti-Catholicism was a pervasive influence on religious and political life in nineteenth-century Wales. Contrary to the views of Trystan Owain Hughes, it mirrored the chronology of anti-Catholic agitation in the rest of Great Britain. Welsh exceptionalism lies in the failure of militant Protestant organisations to recruit in Wales, and the assimilation of anti-Catholic rhetoric into the frictions between the Church of England and Nonconformity over the disestablishment of the Church. Furthermore, whereas the persistence of anti-Catholicism in twentieth-century Britain is primarily associated with cities like Liverpool and Glasgow, its continuing influence in Wales was largely confined to rural areas and small towns.© 2005 Cambridge University Press.
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CITATION STYLE
O’leary, P. (2005). When was anti- catholicism? The case of Nineteenth- and twentieth- centuy wales. Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 56(2), 308–325. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022046904002131
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