Roman Catholic Church

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Author summary George Douglas
Lady Gertrude Georgina Douglas (later Stock) wrote during the later nineteenth century under the name of George Douglas . She used the novel both as a means of earning money and as a vehicle for...
Author summary Evelyn Waugh
EW was a twentieth-century novelist whose startling black humour goes together with devastating satire and a low estimate of unredeemed human nature (whether he is fictionalizing the failings of other people or of himself). He...
Author summary John Oliver Hobbes
Writing for a brief period at the turn of the twentieth century, the pseudonymous JOH (whose actual married name was Pearl Craigie ) was the author of over a dozen novellas, novels, and several plays...
politics Elizabeth Oxenbridge, Lady Tyrwhit
Lady Tyrwhit and her husband continued to prosper through the reign of Queen Mary . Susan M. Felch points out that long before she was a persecutor of Protestants, Mary had participated in the humanist...
politics Catherine Marsh
She wrote, in 1886 and 1891-2, several letters protesting against the first and second Home Rule Bills which sought to reduce British political and religious control over Ireland. Her anti-Home-Rule stance was no doubt...
politics Harriet Hamilton King
It seems that her conversion to Catholicism must have involved some change in the political views she had held so long and so passionately, since Garibaldi was in his lifetime an icon of anti-Catholicism, and...
politics Anne Locke
Entertaining Knox was a politically dangerous thing for Locke and her husband to do under Queen Mary . A few years later, when Anne Locke left England, her motives no doubt included a religio-political element—she...
politics Lady Lucy Herbert
It was LLH who persuaded her sister Winifred to write out the full story of how she engineered her husband's escape from the Tower and who then preserved and apparently circulated the story. She no...
politics Dorothy Richardson
With varying degrees of commitment (usually minor), Richardson immersed herself in various philosophical movements of the period. She did much of her reading at the British Museum 's Reading Room, which she revered, but elsewhere...
politics May Laffan
As well as strongly opposing the convent or the clerical education system, ML took a strong interest in the Irish university problem. When she was writing her novels Catholics were discouraged from attending the long-established...
politics Jane Barker
Though all the English at St-Germain were Jacobites this did not mean they were all in agreement. There were deep and sometimes acrimonious divisions among them over tactics, principles, and especially allegiances. JB was a...
Occupation Thomas Moore
He published several politically-charged works that highlighted his Irish patriotism, particularly his outrage at Ireland's disadvantages under English rule. These titles included satirical poetry (Odes upon Cash, Corn, Catholics, and Other Matters, 1828)...
Occupation Katharine Evans
In Malta, an island whose Roman Catholicism the Quaker women regarded as idolatrous, they were warned by the British Consul that they ran a risk, if they engaged in missionary activity, of arrest by...
Material Conditions of Writing Harriett Mozley
In writing this novel she had to struggle with worsening ill-health, and with her distress and anxiety over her brother John Henry as his pilgrimage of belief took him steadily closer towards joining the Roman Catholic Church
Material Conditions of Writing Lucas Malet
The Far Horizon, which LM published four years after her conversion to Roman Catholicism , was a new departure for her, a religious novel which was perceived as proselytising.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Malet, Lucas. “Introduction”. The History of Sir Richard Calmady, edited by Talia Schaffer, University of Birmingham Press, p. ix - xxxii.
xii
TLS Centenary Archive Centenary Archive [1902-2012]. http://www.gale.com/c/the-times-literary-supplement-historical-archive.
254 (23 November 1906): 394

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