Catholic emancipation and the idea of religious liberty in 1830s New South Wales

Journal article


Irving-Stonebraker, Sarah Louise. (2021). Catholic emancipation and the idea of religious liberty in 1830s New South Wales. Australian Journal of Politics and History. 67(2), pp. 193-207. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajph.12723
AuthorsIrving-Stonebraker, Sarah Louise
Abstract

Historians do not typically associate the use of concepts like “civil and religious freedom” and “liberty of conscience” with colonial New South Wales. Indeed, for many years, historians assumed that the people of New South Wales were largely indifferent to religious ideas, and often unthinkingly sectarian. The research presented here suggests we revise this assumption. When the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 passed through the Parliament of the United Kingdom in 1829, it triggered a lively and genuinely intellectual discussion in New South Wales about religious liberty and its implications. Through a careful analysis of the colony's 1830s press, I argue that there existed a robust discussion about the nature of religious freedom: its theology, its history, and its relationship to the legal and political question of establishment. This period provides an interesting vignette of, and point of entry into, the broader issue of the role of religion in colonial New South Wales.

Year2021
JournalAustralian Journal of Politics and History
Journal citation67 (2), pp. 193-207
PublisherJohn Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd
University of Queensland
ISSN0004-9522
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1111/ajph.12723
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85122007082
Page range193-207
Publisher's version
License
All rights reserved
File Access Level
Controlled
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online16 Dec 2021
Publication process dates
Accepted09 Nov 2020
Deposited21 Nov 2023
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https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/8zz7v/catholic-emancipation-and-the-idea-of-religious-liberty-in-1830s-new-south-wales

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