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.
Anglican Church
Connections
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Anna Wheeler | AW
came from a wealthy and socially prominent Protestant
Irish landowning family; she was the god-daughter of the Irish nationalist Henry Grattan
. Her family life was intellectual and enlightened, as well as prosperous: the... |
Cultural formation | Anna Wheeler | |
Family and Intimate relationships | Anna Wheeler | AW
's father, Nicholas Milley Doyle
, was a radical Anglican, who became, however, a prebendary in the Church of Ireland
. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. Swindles, Julia. Political Women 1800 - 1850. Editors Frow, Ruth and Edmund Frow, Pluto Press. 205 Kelly, Gary, editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 158. Gale Research. 349 Several sources say he was an archbishop. |
Cultural formation | Susanna Wesley | SW
was born into the middle class and into the very heart of the English Dissenting movement. Her father accepted her choice (made at twelve years old on the basis of her own careful reasoning)... |
Cultural formation | Fay Weldon | Brought up as an atheist, FW
belonged for most of her life to no organized religion, but admitted to believing in manifestations like ghosts haunting the scenes of terrible or painful events (terrors in a... |
Cultural formation | Julia Wedgwood | Her parents were connected to the Unitarian
tradition descending in the family from Josiah Wedgwood
as well as to the largely Anglican
evangelical and philanthropic Clapham Sect
centred close to their home in South London... |
Cultural formation | Augusta Webster | She came from a presumably white family with mixed English, Scottish, and French background on her mother's side, which also had strong literary connections. There is dispute among critics as to how far she was... |
Cultural formation | Beatrice Webb | Her family were Unitarian
s but her father converted to the Church of England
. She followed his example and was confirmed as an Anglican while at boarding school in Bournemouth. But the hold of... |
Cultural formation | Beatrice Webb | Beatrice Potter (later BW
) underwent a religious crisis in late adolescence; she experienced a short-lived conversion to traditional Anglican Christianity
in 1875. After that she returned to looking for alternatives—Buddhism and other Eastern religions... |
Cultural formation | Mary Webb | Mary was shy, intense, and introspective. 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. Coles, Gladys Mary. The Flower of Light: A Biography of Mary Webb. Duckworth. 4 |
Cultural formation | Harriet Shaw Weaver | She was brought up in a wealthy, English, middle-class, evangelical Church of England
household where prayer was read twice daily. By early adulthood she rejected the teachings of the Church, but she kept her views... |
Cultural formation | Evelyn Waugh | Born into the English professional class, brought up as a HighAnglican
, EW
renounced this faith before he left school and spent some years as an atheist before his conversion to Roman Catholicism
in 1930. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. Stovel, Bruce, and Bruce Stovel. “The Genesis of Evelyn Waugh’s Comic Vision. Waugh, Captain Grimes, and <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>Decline and Fall</span>”;. Jane Austen and Company: Collected Essays, edited by Nora Foster Stovel and Nora Foster Stovel, University of Alberta Press, pp. 181-0. 184 |
Cultural formation | Susanna Watts | Although she was baptised in the Church ofEngland
, SW
was remarkable for her principled empathy and personal friendships with Dissenters
. Aucott, Shirley. Susanna Watts (1768 to 1842): author of Leicester’s first guide, abolitionist and bluestocking. Shirley Aucott. 39 |
Cultural formation | Rosamund Marriott Watson | She came from an English, presumably white, middle-class, Anglican
family. As an adult she became an agnostic, and also entertained an interest in spiritualism. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. “Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC. 240 |
politics | Elisabeth Wast | Early in the eighteenth century, the Covenant, Scotland's Glory above other Nations, was threatened by a malignant, ungodly, Prelatick Party. Wast, Elisabeth. Memoirs; or, Spiritual Exercises. 137 |
Timeline
By November 1700: The recently founded SPCK opened a charity...
Building item
By November 1700
The recently founded SPCK
opened a charity school for forty girls at St Andrew's in Holborn, where a boys' school had opened early in the year. Subscribers included Sarah, Lady Cowper
for three pounds...
1701: The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel...
Building item
1701
The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel
(a major Anglican
missionary organisation) was founded as an offshoot of the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge
.
: Charles Wesley and two or three other undergraduates...
Building item
Spring1729
Charles Wesley
and two or three other undergraduates founded a society at Oxford which others called methodistical.
1761: The Countess of Huntingdon established her...
Building item
1761
The Countess of Huntingdon
established her first registered chapel, at Brighton.
1769: Hannah Ballimg: move in unlikely event of...
Building item
1769
6 February 1772: The House of Commons rejected a petition...
National or international item
6 February 1772
The House of Commons
rejected a petition to drop the Creeds and Thirty-Nine Articles as requisites to Anglican
belief.
Spring 1772-Spring 1773: The passage through parliament of the Toleration...
Building item
Spring 1772-Spring 1773
The passage through parliament of the Toleration Bill gave opportunities to Edmund Burke
to argue for religious toleration—in the belief that this would actually strengthen the Church of England
.
17 April 1774: The inaugural service was held at the first...
Building item
17 April 1774
The inaugural service was held at the first Unitarian
chapel, in Essex Street, London.
1784: John Wesley broke finally with the Church...
Building item
1784
John Wesley
broke finally with the Church of England
, though still vacillating as to whether to espouse full Evangelicism
; in 1787 his Methodist
chapels were registered as Dissenting chapels.
2 March 1790: Charles James Fox proposed in the House of...
Building item
2 March 1790
Charles James Fox
proposed in the House of Commons
the repeal of the Corporation and Test Acts (instruments of discrimination against Dissenters
). Next day his motion was voted down (its third rejection in four years).
After 2 March 1791: Following the death of John Wesley, the Methodists...
Building item
After 2 March 1791
Following the death of John Wesley
, the Methodists
extended the circuit system throughout Britain as an alternative to the parish system used by the Established Church
1793: William Freind argued in Peace and Union...
National or international item
1793
William Freind
argued in Peace and Union Recommended to the Associated Bodies of Republicans and Anti-Republicans against the union of Church
and state.
1797: Andrew Bell, a Scottish Anglican clergyman,...
Writing climate item
1797
Andrew Bell
, a Scottish Anglican
clergyman, published An Experiment in Education, made at the Male Asylum of Madras. Suggesting a system by which a school or family may teach itself under the superintendence...
By April 1799: The Church Missionary Society was founded...
National or international item
By April 1799
The Church Missionary Society
was founded by the Evangelical wing of the Church of England
, as the Society for Missions in Africa and the East.
1801: The Quaker Joseph Lancaster opened his non-sectarian...
Building item
1801
The QuakerJoseph Lancaster
opened his non-sectarian Free School in Borough Road in south-east London; he soon had a thousand pupils.
Texts
No bibliographical results available.