Anglican Church

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Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Textual Production Rose Macaulay
Writing about a wide range of authors from Caedmon to Coventry Patmore , she devotes a significant portion of the book to the seventeenth century, which held a great interest for her. The chapter Anglicans
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 Eliza Lynn Linton
ELL published Under Which Lord?, a three-volume novel whose protagonist, an agnostic of the highest moral character, suffers when his wife and daughter adopt the prevailing taste for extreme High Church Anglicanism .
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
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Textual Production Monica Furlong
MF edited for the SPCK a collection of essays about the ordination of women, entitled Feminine in the Church.
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.
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 Monica Furlong
MF edited another collection of essays, entitled Mirror to the Church : Reflections on Sexism, timed to coincide with the Lambeth Conference.
The Lambeth Conference, a regular global gathering of the constituent bodies of...
Textual Production Susanna Hopton
After years of theological study had brought her back from the Roman Catholic to the Anglican church , SH addressed a detailed account of her shift in thinking to her former, Catholic mentor, Henry Turberville .
Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Hopton, Susanna. “Introductory Note”. Susanna Hopton, edited by Julia J. Smith, Ashgate, p. ix - xxiii.
xvi
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 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 Monica Furlong
MF published with the SCMPressAct of Synod—Act of Folly?, a strong statement about the way the Church of England was handling the incorporation of women priests.
Blackwell’s Online Bookshop. http://Bookshop.Blackwell.co.uk.
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 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 Monica Furlong
MF published through the SPCK a historical, doctrinal, political, and analytical study of the Church of England (the established church of most of the UK), which she titled by the church's colloquial name: C of...
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...

Timeline

16 August 1851: Harriet Brownlow Byron founded the Anglican...

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16 August 1851

Harriet Brownlow Byron founded the AnglicanSociety of All Saints Sisters of the Poor at 67 Mortimer Street in the town of London Colney in Hertfordshire.

3 November 1855: An advertisement marked the launch of the...

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3 November 1855

An advertisement marked the launch of the conservative (high Tory and Anglo-Catholic ), weeklySaturday Review; it focused on Politics, Literature, Science, and Art.

1857: Dean Howson advocated the establishment of...

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1857

Dean Howson advocated the establishment of an Order of Deaconesses within the Anglican Church ; such an Order was recognized by the Lambeth Conference of Anglican bishops only in 1897.

November 1860: Thomas Hill Green became one of the first...

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November 1860

Thomas Hill Green became one of the first laymen to hold a fellowship at Balliol College .

18 July 1862: The Bishop of London, Archibald Campbell...

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18 July 1862

The Bishop of London, Archibald Campbell Tait , set apartElizabeth Ferard to be a deaconess in the Anglican Church , and to head an Order of Deaconesses, even though no such order as yet officially existed.

26 July 1869: The Irish Church Act brought forward by Prime...

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26 July 1869

The Irish Church Act brought forward by Prime Minister Gladstone disestablished the Church of Ireland and substantially reduced its property, although it met with strong opposition from the House of Lords .

1 January 1871: The Disestablishment Act came into effect;...

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1 January 1871

The Disestablishment Act came into effect; the (Anglican) Church of Ireland ceased to be a national body on a par with the Church of England.

1871: The University Test Act abolished all religious...

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1871

The University Test Act abolished all religious tests (of loyalty to the Church of England ) at both ancient universities in England (Oxford and Cambridge ) for admittance to matriculation, degrees, prizes, and fellowships.

1875: The British parliament passed the Public...

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1875

The British parliament passed the Public Worship Regulation Act, which was designed to curb the growing enthusiasm in the Church of England for ritual.

January 1876: The monthly Friendly Leaves, published in...

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January 1876

The monthly Friendly Leaves, published in London, began as the first magazine of the Girls' Friendly Society of the Church of England .

1880: The Church of England Zenana Missionary Society...

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1880

January 1880: The GFS Advertiser, devoted to the moral...

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January 1880

The GFS Advertiser, devoted to the moral welfare of young women, began publishing from the Girls' Friendly Society of the Church of England .

January 1881: India's Women, the magazine of the Church...

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January 1881

India's Women, the magazine of the Church of EnglandZenana Missionary Society , began monthly publication in London.

January 1883: Friendly Work began monthly (later quarterly)...

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January 1883

Friendly Work began monthly (later quarterly) publication in London from the Girls' Friendly Society of the Church of England .

1883: The Church Schools Company was founded in...

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1883

The Church Schools Company was founded in London.

Texts

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