George Fox

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Standard Name: Fox, George,, 1624 - 1691

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Friends, Associates Anne Audland
The peripatetic George Fox again visited the Audlands' house: Anne and her husband wanted him to stay for a meeting next day, but he refused—rightly, as it turned out.
Fox, George. The Journal. Editor Smith, Nigel, Penguin.
332
Friends, Associates Anne Audland
George Fox visited the Audlands' house many times: in 1652, 1656, and 1657, when he held a meeting there.
Fox, George. The Journal. Editor Smith, Nigel, Penguin.
87, 93, 205, 237
Friends, Associates Rebecca Travers
She must have been a close personal friend of her co-religionist Joan Whitrow and her family, for when Joan's daughter Susannah was dying in 1677 she asked for Rebecca, that dear Friend . ....
Friends, Associates Mary Fisher
MF was personally acquainted with many of the pioneers among the Quakers. It was contact with George Fox that first converted her. She shared her jail term at York with Thomas Aldam and Elizabeth Hooton
Friends, Associates Anne Whitehead
She worked closely with George Fox , taking over various administrative duties from him when he was in prison.
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Intertextuality and Influence Elizabeth Hooton
EH 's thinking helped shape that of George Fox and thus of the Quaker movement as a whole. Emily Manners published a booklet about her for the Friends Historical Society in 1914.
Solo: Search Oxford University Libraries Online. http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?vid=OXVU1&fromLogin=true&reset_config=true.
Intertextuality and Influence Mary Ann Kelty
Her narratives of these emotional involvements lead her into analysis of the different effects of love on the two sexes. This analysis is founded on two women writers (identifiable although she does not name them)...
Occupation Anne Audland
On their conversion, AA and her husband both became preachers. George Fox mentions John's ministry and his preaching that same year.
Fox, George. The Journal. Editor Smith, Nigel, Penguin.
86, 99
Occupation Margaret Fell
MF was an important Quaker preacher; yet her own preaching was probably eclipsed in importance by her publications and by her facilitation of the publishing of other Quakers. George Fox 's journal includes a defence...
Occupation Katharine Evans
Even their opponents acknowledged the women's charismatic spiritual power. After their relations with the consul deteriorated, Katherine magisterially rebuked him as a condemned person, and stands guilty before God. She urged him to repent, but...
politics Margaret Fell
In organising the Fund she was interested in promoting social cohesion among Quakers as well as relieving hardship.
Kunze, Bonnelyn Young. Margaret Fell and the Rise of Quakerism. Macmillan.
87
George Fox continued to frequent Swarthmoor, and at the time of the Restoration (May 1660) was...
politics Margaret Fell
This approach to the newly-restored monarch was a vital tactical move for the Quakers, who had been persecuted in the last years of the Interregnum. George Fox was still in prison; MF went to London...
politics Margaret Fell
When magistrates charged her with keeping a meeting at her house, she replied: while it pleased the Lord to let me have a House, I would endeavour to worship him in it.
Fell, Margaret. A Brief Collection of Remarkable Passages. J. Sowle.
7
For refusing...
politics Hester Biddle
George Fox later reported meeting HB in the Strand in London in about 1657, at a time when Cromwell was persecuting Quakers . She told him of her plan to seek out the future Charles II
politics Margaret Fell
MF wrote to ask her first husband to arrange the publication of tracts by George Fox and others.
Stephen, Sir Leslie, and Sidney Lee, editors. The Dictionary of National Biography. Smith, Elder.

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