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Anglican Church
Connections
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Residence | Charlotte Maria Tucker | At his point in her life, her close relatives having either died or grown up, CMT
felt that she had no further family responsibilities and was free to devote herself to missionary work in India... |
Reception | Josephine Butler | In 1980 the Church of England
formally commemorated her in a revised edition of the Book of Common Prayer, marking December 30, the date of her death, as a day of observance. This recognition... |
Reception | Monica Furlong | The original book and its successor sold extremely well, and the prayers became widely used. But a rude review in the Daily Telegraph led to questions in the House of Commons
, particularly about a... |
Reception | Christina Rossetti | This best-known poem has had myriad editions, often with illustrations, and generated a wide range of interpretation. It resonates powerfully with CR
's Anglicanism
, and more particularly her experience at the St Mary Magdalene Penitentiary |
Reception | Monica Furlong | Though she remained to some degree persona non grata with the Established Church
, MF
received an honorary doctorate in divinity from the EpiscopalianGeneral Theological Seminary
in New York, as well as an... |
Reception | Evelyn Underhill | EU
received most of her accolades during her lifetime. In addition to becoming the first woman both to lecture in religion at Oxford
and head retreats in the Anglican Church
, she was elected a... |
Reception | Jane Taylor | Like her sister
many years later, she replied robustly to complaint about her overtly Dissenting code of conduct. She reveals a clear sense of the disparity between standards applied to hegemonic beliefs and those applied... |
Publishing | Monica Furlong | MF
collected in Christian Uncertainties articles which she had written at first for the Church Times, conservative organ of the Anglican Church
. |
Publishing | Mary Bailey | MB
published at Ballingdon in Suffolk a devotional work, Reflections upon the Litany of the Church of England. Neither this work nor her next two publications are listed by OCLC. 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. |
Publishing | Christabel Coleridge | During the time CC
and Yonge co-wrote novels, they also co-edited the Evangelical journal The Monthly Packet. Coleridge eventually succeeded Yonge as editor. Harris, Mary J. Y. Memoirs of Frances Mary Peard. W. H. Smith. 18 |
Publishing | Anne Mozley | |
Publishing | Enid Blyton | |
Publishing | Elizabeth Melvill | The title-page this time shows the royal arms. This undated edition is associated by Rebecca Laroche
with the Hampton Court Conference of Anglican
bishops at which James I
pronounced No Bishop, no King Laroche, Rebecca. “Elizabeth Melville and Her Friends: Seeing ‘Ane Godlie Dreame’ through Political Lenses”. CLIO, Vol. 34 , No. 3, pp. 277-95. 287 |
Publishing | Margaret Roberts | This was re-issued (as by the author of Atelier du Lys) by the Church of England
publishing house, the National Society's Depository
, in 1890. Gollancz
put out a new edition in 1967 with... |
Author summary | Christina Rossetti | CR
wrote and published poetry ranging from religious poetry, love lyrics, and sonnets to narrative and dramatic verse. She published five successive volumes of verse, three collected editions, and many individual poems in anthologies and... |
Timeline
8 November 1978: The General Synod of the Church of England...
Building item
8 November 1978
The General Synod of the Church of England
voted against the ordination of women, despite support for it from most bishops and lay members (not priests), and the recommendation of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
8 November 1978: The General Synod of the Church of England...
Building item
8 November 1978
The General Synod of the Church of England
voted against the ordination of women, despite support for it from most bishops and lay members (not priests), and the recommendation of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
1986: Those in the Anglican mother-church who opposed...
Building item
1986
Those in the Anglican mother-church who opposed the ordination of women secured a vote forbidding ordained women from other parts of the Anglican Communion
from celebrating the Eucharist in Britain.
February 1987: The St Hilda Community, activists for Anglican...
Building item
February 1987
The St Hilda Community
, activists for Anglican
women's ordination, held its first Eucharist service in the student chapel of Queen Mary College
, London, celebrated by an ordained American, Suzanne Fageol
.
1990: The Church of England possessed about 1,630...
Building item
1990
The Church of England
possessed about 1,630 officially redundant churches, or a tenth of the total in use; a quarter of these had been declared superfluous since 1958.
11 November 1992: The General Synod of the Church of England...
Building item
11 November 1992
The General Synod of the Church of England
voted to allow women priests; this was the culmination of a long campaign for the ordination of women.
14 January 1994: Katharine, Duchess of Kent, converted to...
Building item
14 January 1994
Katharine, Duchess of Kent
, converted to Catholicism
, becoming the first Roman Catholic member of the British Royal Family in more than 300 years.
12 March 1994: The first women priests in the Church of...
Building item
12 March 1994
The first women priests in the Church of England
were ordained in Bristol.
18 June 2006: Katharine Jefferts Schori, Bishop of Nevada,...
Building item
18 June 2006
Katharine Jefferts Schori
, Bishop of Nevada, became arguably . . . the highest-ranking woman in Episcopal
history when she was chosen presiding bishop of the Episcopal church in America.
21 April 2011: Hundreds of Anglicans converted to the Roman...
Building item
21 April 2011
Hundreds of Anglicans
converted to the Roman Catholic Church
, with the blessing of Pope Benedict XVI, because they were not prepared to countenance the consecration of women bishops.
November 2012: The Church of England caused national consternation...
National or international item
November 2012
The Church of England
caused national consternation when its Synod narrowly voted down the opening of its episcopate in Britain to its first women bishops.
Wintour, Patrick, and Lizzy Davies. “Bishop vote sets state against church”. Guardian Weekly, p. 16.
14 July 2014: Reversing a decision of November 2012, the...
National or international item
14 July 2014
Reversing a decision of November 2012, the Synod of the Church of England
voted to allow women to be consecrated as bishops. Justin Welby
, Archbishop of Canterbury, expressed delight at the decision.
Castle, Stephen. “Church of England Votes to Accept Women as Bishops”. The New York Times.
Texts
No bibliographical results available.