CCEd publications

Document Contents

About the Database

  • Arthur Burns, Kenneth Fincham and Stephen Taylor, ‘Counting the clergy: the CCEd and the limitations of a prosopographical tool’, in Prosopography approaches and applications. A handbook, ed. K. S. B. Keats-Rohan (Prosopographica et Genealogica, 13, Oxford: P&G, 2007), pp. 275–89.
  • Arthur Burns, Kenneth Fincham and Stephen Taylor, Reconstructing clerical careers: the experience of the Clergy of the Church of England Database’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 55 (2004), 726–37. Read it here.
  • Arthur Burns, Kenneth Fincham and Stephen Taylor, ‘The historical public and academic archival research: the experience of the Clergy of the Church of England Database’, Archives, 27 (2002), 110–19. Read it here.
  • A. Burns, ‘Collecting the Clergy’, The King’s College London Report, 10 (2002), 40–3.
  • A. Burns, ‘Collecting the Clergy’, In Touch, Autumn 2002, pp. 26–7 (King’s College London alumnus magazine).
  • Arthur Burns, Kenneth Fincham and Stephen Taylor, ‘In and out of the Archives: Reflections on the diocesan records of the Church of England since the Reformation’,  in J.P. Genet & F.-J. Ruggiu (eds.),  Du papier à l’archive, du privé au public: France et iles Britanniques, deux memoires  (Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 2011), pp. 83 – 97. An earlier version of this paper can be read here.
  • Arthur Burns, Kenneth Fincham and Stephen Taylor, ‘The problems and potential of pouring old wine into new bottles: reflections on the Clergy of the Church of England Database 1999-2009 and beyond‘, in Rosemary C. E. Hayes and William J. Sheils (eds.), Clergy, Church and Society in England and Wales, c.1200-1800 (Borthwick Texts and Studies, 41, 2013), pp. 45-60.

Work by the project directors and officers drawing on the Database

  • Arthur Burns, ‘My unfortunate parish’: anglican urban ministry in Bethnal Green, 1809-c.1850′, in Melanie Barber, Gabriel Sewell and Stephen Taylor (eds.),  From the Reformation to the Permissive Society: A Miscellany in Celebration of the 400th Anniversary of Lambeth Palace Library (Woodbridge, Boydell Press for Church of England Record Society, 2010).
  • Kenneth Fincham and Stephen Taylor, ‘Vital Statistics: Episcopal Ordination and Ordinands in England, 1646-60‘, English Historical Review, 126 (2011).
  • Kenneth Fincham and Stephen Taylor, ‘Episcopalian Conformity and Nonconformity, 1646-60’ in J. McElligott and D.L. Smith (eds), Royalists and Royalism during the Interregnum (Manchester UP, 2010)
  • Kenneth Fincham and Stephen Taylor, ‘The restoration of the Church of England, 1660-1662: ordination, re-ordination and conformity’, in Stephen Taylor and Grant Tapsell (eds.), The nature of the English Revolution Revisited. Essays in honour of John Morrill (2013).
  • Kenneth Fincham, ‘The roles and influence of household chaplains, c.1600-c.1660’ in H. Adlington, T. Lockwood and G. Wright (eds.), Chaplains in Early Modern England: Patronage, Literature and Religion (Manchester UP, 2013), pp. 11-35.

Other work using the database (see also the CCEd Journal on this website)

  • Daniel Cummins, ‘The clergy database as a tool for academic research: The patronage of the archbishops of York c. 1730-1800′, in Rosemary C. E. Hayes and William J. Sheils (eds.), Clergy, Church and Society in England and Wales, c.1200-1800 (Borthwick Texts and Studies, 41, 2013), pp. 163-75.
  • Michael Gladwin, The Anglican Clergy in Australia 1780-1850: Building a British World (Boydell and Brewer, Royal Historical Society Studies in History, Woodbridge, 2015).