He also wrote three volumes himself: The Popes and European Revolution, A History of the Popes, 1830-1914, and The Early Reformation on the Continent. He oversaw the publications of a 16-volume work entitled The Oxford History of the Christian Church. He wrote numerous books during his lifetime including John Cassian: A Study in Primitive Monasticism, The Reformation, The Secularization of the European Mind in the Nineteenth Century, Victorian Miniature, The Victorian Church, The Christian Church in the Cold War, and A History of Christianity. It also ended Parliament's nominal control over changes in doctrine and ritual. When put into effect, the recommendations of the Chadwick Report, retained the ties between the Church of England and the state but gave the church greater control over the appointment of bishops. In 1966, he was put at the head of a commission to redefine Parliament's role in church affairs. He was chancellor of the University of East Anglia from 1985 to 1994. He was master of Selwyn College, Cambridge University, for almost 30 years, beginning in the mid-1950s and retiring in 1983. The Church of England ordained him a deacon in 1940 and a priest in 1941. He attended Cuddeson, a theological college, to study for holy orders. He received a degree in history in 1938 and a degree in theology in 1939 from St. Hinchliff provides interesting commentaries on the prevailing issues in the Victorian Church, if a less than compelling personal por- trait of Temple the man. William Owen Chadwick was born in London, England on May 20, 1916.
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