“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
Anglican Church
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Ruth Padel | RP
is an Englishwoman and a member of the Church ofEngland
. |
Cultural formation | Harriet Hamilton King | Very little is known about her early life. Presumably white, she was born to an upper-class family with relations in the peerage, Scottish on both sides. Late in life she converted to Roman Catholicism
... |
Cultural formation | Louisa Anne Meredith | LAM
had a dual class background: her mother came from a professional family and her father from a working-class one, though he latterly worked more with his head than his hands. They were of English... |
Cultural formation | Annie S. Swan | Her father had been impressed as a young man by the Morrisonian revival, a revolt against rigorous Calvinism. He was violently opposed to belief in predestination, and helped build a little Evangelical Union Church which... |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Walker | EW
was born into the rising English urban middle class, but her husband, who spent much time among the upper classes, later wrote that both he and she were obscure Persons of low Degree. Walker, Anthony, and Elizabeth Walker. The Vertuous Wife: or, the Holy Life of Mrs. Elizabth Walker. J. Robinson, A. and J. Churchill, J. Taylor, and J. Wyat. prelims |
Cultural formation | Henrietta Battier | HB
's writings demonstrate that she was not only Irish but also an Irish nationalist, a Whig, a Protestant (probably Church of Ireland
) and a sympathiser with freemasonry. Battier, Henrietta. The Protected Fugitives. James Porter, http://Bodleian: 280 i 105. xiv, 120-30, 158ff, 27-31, 163ff, 181-2, 190-2 |
Cultural formation | A. S. Byatt | |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Goudge | She belonged to the Church of England
, which was a great influence on her life. Goudge, Elizabeth. The Joy of the Snow. Hodder and Stoughton. 244 |
Cultural formation | Pamela Frankau | |
Cultural formation | Mary Sidney Herbert, Countess of Pembroke | This Mary Sidney was born of the union of two families which were powers in the land. She made the most of her rank. She was a devout Anglican Protestant
, though her father's family... |
Cultural formation | Dorothy Leigh | |
Cultural formation | Janet Schaw | JS
was a white Scotswoman of the land-owning and business class. She was a Presbyterian
by birth and training; as an adult she was in principle broad-minded and tolerant of religious difference, except for being... |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Tipper | |
Cultural formation | Mary Rich, Countess of Warwick | She grew up as a merely nominal Anglican
without any inward and spiritual faith. Mendelson, Sara Heller. The Mental World of Stuart Women: Three Studies. Harvester Press. 80 Walker, Anthony, and Elizabeth Walker. The Vertuous Wife: or, the Holy Life of Mrs. Elizabth Walker. J. Robinson, A. and J. Churchill, J. Taylor, and J. Wyat. 8 |
Cultural formation | E. Owens Blackburne | She was Irish by birth and family, presumably white, and probably Protestant, which is to say a member of the Church of Ireland
. O’Donoghue, David James. The Poets of Ireland. Gale Research. 62 Boase, Frederic. Modern English Biography. F. Cass. |
Timeline
8 November 1978: The General Synod of the Church of England...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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,...
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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...
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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.