Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note on references, quotations and translations
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- PART I ENGLAND AND SWITZERLAND, 1737–1763
- 1 Putney, Oxford and the question of English Enlightenment
- 2 Lausanne and the Arminian Enlightenment
- 3 The re-education of young Gibbon: method, unbelief and the turn towards history
- 4 The Hampshire militia and the problems of modernity
- 5 Study in the camp: erudition and the search for a narrative
- PART II THE ENCOUNTER WITH PARIS AND THE DEFENCE OF ERUDITION, 1761–1763
- PART III LAUSANNE AND ROME: THE JOURNEY TOWARDS A SUBJECT, 1763–1764
- Epilogue: Gibbon and the rhythm that was different
- List of references
- Index
1 - Putney, Oxford and the question of English Enlightenment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note on references, quotations and translations
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- PART I ENGLAND AND SWITZERLAND, 1737–1763
- 1 Putney, Oxford and the question of English Enlightenment
- 2 Lausanne and the Arminian Enlightenment
- 3 The re-education of young Gibbon: method, unbelief and the turn towards history
- 4 The Hampshire militia and the problems of modernity
- 5 Study in the camp: erudition and the search for a narrative
- PART II THE ENCOUNTER WITH PARIS AND THE DEFENCE OF ERUDITION, 1761–1763
- PART III LAUSANNE AND ROME: THE JOURNEY TOWARDS A SUBJECT, 1763–1764
- Epilogue: Gibbon and the rhythm that was different
- List of references
- Index
Summary
THE GIBBON FAMILY AND THE CRISIS IN CHURCH AND STATE
The purpose of this volume will be to effect a series of contextualisations: to situate Gibbon's life in a succession of settings, in which his creation of the text of the Decline and Fall may be usefully understood. It will be observed that I take him to have been the author of that text, and believe the text to be intelligible as the product of his activity. At the same time, that activity was carried on in a number of contexts, of some of which he may occasionally have been more aware than of others, while some may not have preoccupied his attention at any time at all; the possibility that some of the contexts which will be distinguished operated to form his text indirectly, subconsciously or unconsciously, is not ruled out before it occurs. Of these contexts some will be national, or regional, and cultural: English, since Gibbon was born in England, spent much of his life there, and wrote his greatest work in English; Lausannais, since he spent crucial years of his life and completed the Decline and Fall there, and first wrote history in the French which he acquired in the Pays de Vaud; and it will be necessary to pay attention to the intellectual climates of Amsterdam, Paris, and Edinburgh, where he did not reside but which were important to him.
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- Barbarism and Religion , pp. 13 - 49Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999