Anglican Church

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Mary Anne Barker
This was a later series of what had begun in 1871 as Evening Hours, a Family Church of England Magazine, edited by E. H. Bickersteth , a hymn-writer and future bishop. MAB ceased to...
Textual Production Emma Jane Worboise
She followed this with nearly fifty novels of domestic, religious, and improving fiction. Although many of her works have romance elements, her style in general was regarded as wholesome. She is generally sympathetic to...
Textual Production Laura Ormiston Chant
Public Morals proved sufficiently popular to be reprinted in 1908.
Trellis Library Catalogue. http://trellis3.tug-libraries.on.ca.
Published on behalf of the National Social Purity Crusade , Public Morals was designed to provide a sound, readable textbook, explaining the duty of the...
Textual Production Felicia Skene
FS published another devotional work, The Ministry of Consolation. A Guide to Confession for the Use of Members of the Church of England.
British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo.
Textual Production Evelyn Underhill
EU 's writings about religious doctrine and practice include the historical and scholarly. The Times Literary Supplement warmly praised her most valuable essay in The Meaning of the Groups, edited by F. A. M. Spencer
Textual Production Mary Astell
The full title is The Christian Religion, As Professed by a Daughter of the Church of England . Containing Proper Directions for the due Behaviour of Women in every Station of Life with remarks on...
Textual Production Susanna Hopton
In an undated letter to Thomas GeersSH took him to task on religious and theological matters, specifically on his failure to stay loyal to the deprived Nonjuring community within the Church of England ...
Textual Production Margaret Fell
Her aim was to persuade him to legislate for liberty of conscience and thereby to liberate the many Quakers in prison for their beliefs. Her publications of this momentous year included To Major Generall Harrison...
Textual Production Dorothy White
She addressed it especially to the Anglican congregation of St Paul's Cathedral—which may mean she had caused some disturbance there.
Textual Production John Henry Newman
The single most controversial and last of the Tracts for the Times (Tract XC or 90, anonymously authored by JHN ) was published; it argued that the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England could...
Textual Production Maude Royden
In her first major pamphlet on Women and the Church of England, MR described the exclusion of women from nearly all Church offices at every level and from every rite of the Church.
Fletcher, Sheila. Maude Royden: A Life. Basil Blackwell.
150
Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford.
Textual Production Doreen Wallace
She dated her prefatory material February 1934.
Wallace, Doreen. The Tithe War. Victor Gollancz.
3-8
She explains in her second chapter the background to this war: the ancient custom of devoting one tenth of each year's produce to religious purposes. From the...
Textual Production Rebecca Travers
She spelled her name Rebecka on the former of these, but in its more conventional form on the other. The former title continues: Of That Eternal Breath begotten and brought forth not of flesh &...
Textual Production E. Arnot Robertson
EAR titled her second World War Two novel Devices and Desires, a phrase in the General Confession in the AnglicanBook of Common Prayer): in her book Greek partisans confront their Nazi occupiers...
Textual Production Elinor James
EJ responded to published comment on James II 's Declaration of Indulgence with Mrs. James's Vindication of the Church of England.
The English Short Title Catalogue records two versions of this, only one of...

Timeline

January 1802: The Christian Observer was launched, as a...

Writing climate item

January 1802

The Christian Observer was launched, as a journalConducted by members of the established church with the aim of combating Methodism and other Dissenting sects as well as radicalism and scepticism.

1803: The Wesleyan Conference decided that their...

Building item

1803

The Wesleyan Conference decided that their association (still within the Anglican Church but soon to form the new body of the Methodist Church ) should bar women from preaching.

Perhaps late 1803: Mrs Marriott (almost certainly Martha Marriott,...

Women writers item

Perhaps late 1803

Mrs Marriott (almost certainly Martha Marriott , 1737-1812, of Mendlesham in Suffolk) published Elements of Religion, Containing a Simple Deduction of Christianity , from its Source to its Present Circumstances.

1811: The National Society for Promoting the Education...

Building item

1812: The Wesleyan Conference split from the Church...

National or international item

1812

The Wesleyan Conference split from the Church of England to form the Methodist Church .

14 August 1829: King's College, University of London, was...

National or international item

14 August 1829

King's College, University of London , was founded and given a charter; it opened its doors two years later.

14 July 1833: John Keble preached a sermon at St Mary's...

National or international item

14 July 1833

John Keble preached a sermon at St Mary's Church, High Street, Oxford (the University Church), on National Apostacy; it is viewed as the beginning of the Tractarian Movement.

1837: The debate over sacramental wine raged in...

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1837

The debate over sacramental wine raged in the temperance movement: Rev. Beardsall of Manchester campaigned for the substitution of grape juice or unfermented wine at the altar.

15 August 1838: The Irish Tithe Commutation Act was passed;...

National or international item

15 August 1838

The Irish Tithe Commutation Act was passed; a dubious victory at best for the peasantry.

1843: The Edinburgh Review chastised the advertising...

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1843

The Edinburgh Review chastised the advertising industry for blatant lies, particularly in the use of fictitious product endorsements.

January 1846: An Anglican newspaper titled The Guardian...

Writing climate item

January 1846

An Anglican newspaper titled The Guardian began publication in London, supporting the Tractarian movement in the Church of England.

18 July 1848: The Sisters of St John's House was established...

Building item

18 July 1848

The Sisters of St John's House was established at King's College Hospital for the newly founded Anglican nursing order, the Community of Nursing Sisters of St John the Divine .

16 October 1848: Priscilla Lydia Sellon founded the Church...

Building item

14 September 1850: A new convent for the Anglican Sisterhood...

Building item

14 September 1850

A new convent for the AnglicanSisterhood of the Holy Cross began construction in Osnaburgh Street in London.

8 August 1851: The system of tithes (one-tenth of the produce...

National or international item

8 August 1851

The system of tithes (one-tenth of the produce of agricultural land paid yearly for the support of the Church of England ) was abolished at the instigation of William Blamire the younger (1790-1862).

Texts

No bibliographical results available.