Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism in Britain Project
Sponsors & Supporters
EFB Project, Department of History, University of Stirling, Stirling, FK9 4LA, Scotland, UK  Tel +44 (0) 1786 467587

Events

17 June 2008  18 June 2008

Workshop in St Andrews

'Did Evangelicalism generate Fundamentalism in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries?'

Location: University of St Andrews

  •  Please see the 'Download Papers' section for a summary of our discussion at this workshop



08 December 2008  -  09 December 2008

Exploring Expressions of Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism in Early Twentieth-Century Britain

‘How deep was the Fundamentalist/Modernist divide in early twentieth–century Britain?'

LOCATION: Rewley House, University of Oxford

  •  Please see the 'Download Papers' section for a summary of our discussion at this conference



21 April 2009  22 April 2009

Workshop in Stirling

'Did Fundamentalism diverge from Evangelicalism in late twentieth-century Britain?'

Location: University of Stirling



16 June 2009  17 June 2009

Exploring Contemporary Expressions of Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism in Britain

'What are the contours of Christian Fundamentalism in contemporary Britain?'

LOCATION: Royal Foundation of St Katharine, London



15 December 2009 -  December 2009

Final Event in London

'Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism in Britain: problems and possibilities'

LOCATION: The College Chapel, King's College London



At the workshops, smaller groups of scholars will engage with the two more diffuse themes less formally.
Note: The workshops are by invitation only

At the larger conferences, addressing two central problems, papers based on more specific research will be discussed and younger researchers will be involved.
Note: The conferences are open to people with an academic interest in the theme.

The final event will bring the findings of the project before a wider audience of the interested public - this event is open to the general public

At each gathering theologians, sociologists and others will be asked to address particular problems relating to the historical problematic under discussion.