Welsh Church Act 1914

{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2019}}

{{Use British English|date=November 2019}}

{{Infobox UK legislation

|type = Act

|short_title = Welsh Church Act 1914

|parliament = Parliament of the United Kingdom

|long_title = An Act to terminate the establishment of the Church of England in Wales and Monmouthshire, and to make provision in respect of the Temporalities thereof, and for other purposes in connection with the matters aforesaid.

|citation = 4 & 5 Geo. 5. c. 91

|introduced_by =

|territorial_extent = United Kingdom

|royal_assent = 18 September 1914

|commencement = 31 March 1920
(see Suspensory Act 1914)

|repeal_date =

|amendments = {{ubli|Interpretation Act 1889|Welsh Church (Temporalities) Act 1919|Statute Law Revision Act 1927|Welsh Church (Amendment) Act 1938|Welsh Church (Burial Grounds) Act 1945|Charities Act 1960|Courts and Legal Services Act 1990|Local Government (Wales) Act 1994|House of Commons (Removal of Clergy Disqualification) Act 2001|Statute Law (Repeals) Act 2004}}

|related_legislation = {{ubli|Irish Church Act 1869|Suspensory Act 1914}}

|repealing_legislation =

|status = Amended

|revised_text = https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo5/4-5/91/contents

|original_text = https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo5/4-5/91/contents/enacted

}}

The Welsh Church Act 1914{{cite web|url=http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo5/4-5/91/contents|title=Welsh Church Act 1914 |publisher=Legislation.gov.uk |access-date=2021-06-02}} (4 & 5 Geo. 5. c. 91) is an act of Parliament under which the Church of England was separated and disestablished in Wales and Monmouthshire, leading to the creation of the Church in Wales. The Act had long been demanded by the Nonconformist community in Wales, which composed the majority of the population and which resented paying taxes to the Church of England. It was sponsored by the Liberal Party (a stronghold of the Nonconformists) and opposed by the Conservative Party (a stronghold of the Anglicans).Glanmor Williams, The Welsh Church from Reformation to Disestablishment, 1603-1920 (U of Wales Press, 2007).

History

The Sunday Closing (Wales) Act 1881 was significant landmark legislation which introduced a religious legal difference to Wales. Welsh university colleges were formed in Cardiff and Bangor in 1883–84 and Welsh issues were prominent in the parliament of 1886–92. The introduction of the Welsh land commission of 1892 and the formation of the University of Wales in 1893 were driven by Welsh Liberals, supported by Welsh Liberal David Lloyd George. Prime Minister William Gladstone also later became more supportive and voted in favour of disestablishment. The two men contributed to Welsh disestablishment and acknowledged the Welsh national consciousness. After 1886 the sentiment of Cymru Fydd developed, with more politicians moving in view towards a Welsh home rule similar to Ireland's, including T. E. Ellis, who also supported disestablishment as a return of religion in Wales to the native order. Whilst the Irish nationalist movement focused on home rule, the Welsh movement focused on disestablishment. The Rosebery government eventually gave in to pressures from Welsh Liberals and Cymru Fydd, and introduced a Welsh Disestablishment Bill 1894. This was rejected; it was followed by another Bill in 1909 which was also rejected. Another Bill was introduced in 1912, and despite rejection from the House of Lords the Bill was passed in 1914 after the Parliament Act allowed overriding of the Lords.{{Cite book |last=Morgan |first=Kenneth O. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2DB2EHJ08aIC |title=Rebirth of a Nation: Wales, 1880-1980 |date=1981 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-821736-7 |pages=36–186 |language=en}}

A 70-year continuous campaign for Welsh disestablishment culminated in the passing of the Welsh Church Act in 1914; it came into force in 1920, having been delayed by the First World War. The campaign was motivated by a desire for freedom of religious expression as well as legal and civil equality for Welsh nonconformity. The matter also became associated with a wider movement for the recognition of the Welsh national identity, Welsh distinctiveness and culture and the Welsh language. Although Welsh Liberals were divided on the issue of Welsh home rule in the 1890s, they were united on disestablishment in Wales.{{Cite book |last1=Evans |first1=Geraint |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Dm2MDwAAQBAJ |title=The Cambridge History of Welsh Literature |last2=Fulton |first2=Helen |date=2019-04-18 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-107-10676-5 |pages=361 |language=en}}

The act was controversial, and was passed by the House of Commons under the provisions of the Parliament Act 1911, which reduced the power of the House of Lords to block legislation. The main financial terms were that the church no longer received tithe money (a land tax), but kept all its churches, properties and glebes. The Welsh Church Commissioners were set up by the act to identify affected assets and oversee their transfer.{{cite journal |last1=Taylor |first1=Simon J. |title=Disestablished Establishment: High and Earthed Establishment in the Church in Wales |journal=Journal of Contemporary Religion |date=May 2003 |volume=18 |issue=2 |pages=227–240 |doi=10.1080/1353790032000067545 |s2cid=143966134 |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1353790032000067545 |access-date=19 May 2023 |language=en |issn=1353-7903}}

The act was politically and historically significant as one of the first pieces of legislation to apply solely to Wales (and Monmouthshire) as opposed to the wider legal entity of England and Wales.Jenkins, P. (1992), A History of Modern Wales 1536–1990.

Owing to the outbreak of the First World War in August 1914, the act was given royal assent on 18 September simultaneously with another controversial bill, the Government of Ireland Act 1914. In addition, royal assent was given to the Suspensory Act 1914 which provided that the two other acts would not come into force for the remainder of the war. On 31 March 1920 most of the Welsh part of the Church of England became the Church in Wales, an independent province of the Anglican Communion, with (originally) four dioceses led by the Archbishop of Wales. However, 18 out of 19 church parishes which spanned the Welsh/English border overwhelmingly voted in individual referendums to remain within the Church of England.The First Report of the Commissioners for Church Temporalities in Wales (1914–16) Cd 8166, p 5; Second Report of the Commissioners for Church Temporalities in Wales (1917–18) Cd 8472 viii 93, p 4.{{cite journal

| last1 = Roberts

| first1 = Nicholas

| date = 2011

| title = The historical background to the Marriage (Wales) Act 2010

| url = http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/21693/

| journal = Ecclesiastical Law Journal

| volume = 13

| issue = 1

| pages = 39–56, fn 98

| doi = 10.1017/S0956618X10000785

| s2cid = 144909754

| access-date = 5 June 2021

}}

The Welsh Church Act 1914 and the Government of Ireland Act 1914 were (together with the Parliament Act 1949) the only acts enacted by invoking the Parliament Act 1911 until the War Crimes Act in 1991.{{cite web | title=The Parliament Act: a century on | website=TotalPolitics.com | date=2011-08-10 | url=https://www.totalpolitics.com/articles/news/parliament-act-century | access-date=2021-06-23}}

Responses

English author G. K. Chesterton, an Anglican who would be received into the Catholic Church in 1922, ridiculed the passion that was generated by the bill in his 1915 poem Antichrist, or the Reunion of Christendom: An Ode, repeatedly addressing F. E. Smith, one of the chief opponents of the act.{{Citation |last=Chesterton |first=Gilbert Keith |title=Antichrist, or the Reunion of Christendom: An Ode |url=https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Poems_(Chesterton,_1915)/Antichrist,_or_the_Reunion_of_Christendom:_An_Ode |work=Poems |access-date=2023-05-19}}

Analysis

An analysis published by Wales Humanists at an event in the Senedd in 2020, reflecting on 100 years of disestablishment in Wales, identified the Welsh Church Act 1914 as a critical component in the development of Wales's distinctively pluralistic and secular approaches to governance in the era of devolution.{{cite web |date=7 December 2020 |title=Wales Humanists launches report on 100 years of disestablishment |url=https://humanism.org.uk/2020/12/07/wales-humanists-launches-report-on-100-years-of-disestablishment/ |access-date=7 December 2020 |work=Humanists UK}}

See also

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

  • O’Leary, Paul. "Religion, Nationality and Politics: Disestablishment in Ireland and Wales 1868–1914." in Contrasts and Comparisons: Studies in Irish and Welsh Church History, edited by J.R. Guy and W.G. Neely (1999): 89–113.
  • Taylor, Simon J. "Disestablished Establishment: High and Earthed Establishment in the Church in Wales." Journal of Contemporary Religion 18.2 (2003): 227–240.
  • Watkin, T. G. "Disestablishment, Self-determination and the Constitutional Development of the Church in Wales." in Essays in Canon Law–A Study of the Church in Wales (U of Wales Press, 1992).
  • Williams, Glanmor. The Welsh Church from Reformation to Disestablishment, 1603-1920 (U of Wales Press, 2007).

{{Church in Wales}}{{Constitutional law of Wales}}{{Welsh devolution}}

Category:1914 in Wales

Category:United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 1914

Category:Anglicanism

Category:History of Christianity in Wales

Category:Church in Wales

Category:Church of England disestablishment

Category:Constitutional laws of Wales

Category:Politics of Wales

Category:Acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom concerning Wales

Category:Christianity and law in the 20th century

Category:History of Monmouthshire

Category:1914 in international relations

Category:Acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom passed under the Parliament Act

Category:Law about religion in the United Kingdom

Category:1914 in Christianity

Category:September 1914

Category:Acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom concerning the Church of England