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A History of the English Parish: The culture of religion from Saint Augustine to Queen Victoria. (Reviews).


A History of the English Parish: The Culture of Religion from Saint Augustine to Queen Victoria. By Norman J.G. Pounds (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2000, xxvi plus 593pp. $95.00).

Although the English parish as a research subject has intrigued scholars, details of its history, physical makeup, and function have proved elusive. That Norman J.G. Pounds, now retired as a professor in history and geography, should have sought to bring these disparate strands together is not surprising, for he has authored numerous works which reflect his interdisciplinary skills.

In this comprehensive work Pounds spans the centuries from early Christian to Victorian, certifying the English parish as the essential building block of both the country's secular and ecclesiastical administration. Indeed, the parish became as crucial for attending roads as souls. "Church and Parish", the first of this book's twelve chapters, treats the structural evolution of the parish. In "Rectors and Vicars" the author assesses the relationship between the Church's upper level engagements--investiture investiture, in feudalism, ceremony by which an overlord transferred a fief to a vassal or by which, in ecclesiastical law, an elected cleric received the pastoral ring and staff (the symbols of spiritual office) signifying the transfer of the office. After the oath of fealty, the lord "invested" the vassal with the fief, usually by giving him some symbol of the land or office transferred., the sale of church benefices benefice (bĕn`əfĭs), in canon law, a position in the church that has attached to it a source of income; also, more narrowly, that income itself. The occupant of a benefice receives its revenue (temporalities) for the performance of stipulated duties (spiritualities), e.g., the celebration of Mass., Mortmain mortmain (môrt`mān') [Fr.,=dead hand], ownership of land by a perpetual corporation. The term originally denoted tenure (see tenure, in law) by a religious corporation, but today it includes ownership by charitable and business corporations.--and every day parish life. Further, he examines the "contentious" tithe, regarding it as the "cement which bound the parish together . . . the nexus which linked patron and parishioner." (p. 43). Pounds professes as geographer in "Parish, Its Bounds and Divisions", a chapter which incorporates boundaries and the secular ceremony of perambulation, population, and settlement, all of which inevitably impinge on configurations of parishes (their multiplying, merging, and decaying). Lest the parish be regarded as only a rural entity, Pounds devotes a chapter to "The Urban Parish" in which town origins, the urban/rural dichotomy, parochial wealth and income, local government, cemetery, tithe, and much else are brought into play.

Under the rubric of parish functions Pounds devotes chapters to personnel, economics, community, church courts, and popular culture. In the first of these, "The Parish and its Servants", Pounds distinguishes between secular and spiritual functions. The priest is viewed from the vantage point of ordination, education, community role, privileges, and even the parsonage in which he lived. The churchwarden, who managed the parish "stock", was easily the most important lay official. Pounds scrutinizes him as well as the parish clerk, sexton, constable, overseers of the poor, surveyor of highways, and the elite vestry.

In "The Economics of the Parish" and "The Parish and the Community" Pounds distinguishes between the church and the parish in their respective economic and social roles. The "spiritualities" represented income derived from tithe, oblation, and fees and provided upkeep for the priest but not secular parish needs. Pounds' enumeration of tithes--sheaves of grain, wool, trees, fish, even brushwood and hedge trimmings--and the protests which the tithe levies provoked give a reality to the impoverishment of medieval and early modern life. The priest did oversee repair of the church chancel chancel, primarily that part of the church close to the altar and used by the officiating clergy. In the early churches it was separated from the nave by a low parapet or open railing (cancellus), its name being thus derived. San Clemente at Rome has one of the few preserved examples. With the development of the choir, additional space was taken, between the sanctuary and the nave, for the accommodation of the canons and singers.; the churchwarden, on the other hand, maintained the people's nave and kept a watchful eye on land, houses, animals, household items, and other such goods given to the church. Collecting the parish rate also fell to the churchwarden who had responsibility for repairing parish roads and bridges and paying performing bellringers. Indeed, clanging bells offered some exhilaration to counter the drudgery of life spent in the fields. O ccasional feast days also offered some solace; however, puritans would eventually denounce even these. Small wonder drinking, brawling, and violence were nor infrequently a panacea for parish woes. Pounds depicts the practical as well as the spiritual side of the masonry parish church: as the most secure structure in the community, it served parishioners' by providing storage for valuables and a repository, the parish chest, for registered baptisms, marriages, and burials. By doing so it embodied and preserved community memory.

Pounds considers two remaining aspects of parish "functions", church counts, "a mirror of society", and popular culture. Although often given short shrift in legal history surveys, courts christian are attended here in a thorough manner, regarding canon law cases involving clergy and litigation perceived as morally germane to the well being of the laity. These latter included wills, churches and churchyards, religious obligations, tithes, marriage, slander, and sorcery sorcery: see incantation; magic; spell; witchcraft.. The venture into popular culture is a similarly splendid interdisciplinary exercise. Here Pounds examines the calendar of popular culture, witchcraft and sorcery, church and folk art, and much else. His treatment of the "media of medieval art"--from the varieties of glazed windows to subjects painted on plaster--evidences the author's curiosity and stretches the reader's imagination.

Finally, three chapters on the parish and its church represent a grand finale and the author's tribute to the parish material culture. Discussion here embodies church plans, architectural styles, building materials, patrons and patronage, the churchyard, its consecration and desecration, and more. Best of all, the author enumerates costs for construction and repairs of specific parish churches, and even wages and prices of materials. In "the priest's church" he reconstructs and describes the church inventory of vessels, vestments, furnishings and fittings, and even objects of sound and smell, the organ and frankincense frankincense: see incense-tree.. He explains, moreover, the underlying meaning of chancel, altar, liturgy, rood rood (rd), crucifix mounted above the entrance to the chancel and flanked by large figures of the Virgin and St. John, an almost invariable feature in the 14th- and 15th-century European church. and rood screen--their crucial role in separating parishioners from the stage and drama of the Mass. Indeed, just as the chancel divided the laity from the priesthood, the nave belonged to the people. Here they worshiped whether standing, kneeling, or sitting on benches, stools, or in pews and interacted with the pr iest's church through the rites of baptism, confirmation, marriage, and burial. In the Reformation church sermonizing in the nave gave particular meaning to the term "auditory" church.

This is a remarkable and encyclopedic book, packed with a lifetime's accumulation of delicious information and anecdotes. Its textual references and eighty odd pages of notes signify that it is current with recent scholarship. While illustrations are occasionally unusual, they are to the point; the many maps and charts deserve the credit normally accorded a geographer. The work becomes all the more intriguing when one considers the difficulties incurred in producing it. That Pounds rendered tribute to those who "helped him with his wheelchair in countless uneven churchyards and churches" is a reminder of this and a poignant testament to the author's steadfastness and scholarly commitment.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Journal of Social History
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Schmidt, Albert J.
Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Dec 22, 2001
Words:1023
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