Gilderdale, Betty. The Seven Lives of Lady Barker. Canterbury University Press.
86-7
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Anna Letitia Barbauld | |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Anna Letitia Barbauld | She strikes a newly bold, almost an insurrectionary note here, calling upon revolutionary France, indeed, to provide a model. [W]hatever is corrupted must be lopt away, she writes, as people assert their long forgotten... |
Material Conditions of Writing | Anna Letitia Barbauld | France and Britain had been at war since the first of February, and the fast was held for the sake of the war. Church of England
bishops composed a form of prayer for the occasion... |
Textual Production | Anna Letitia Barbauld | She also kept up her output of political poetry. Only a few years after this Hannah More
's Bishop Bonner's Ghost (a ballad extolling, through irony, the modern, enlightened Church of England
) drew from... |
Cultural formation | Hélène Barcynska | |
Family and Intimate relationships | Hélène Barcynska | HB
said that her father, Colonel Henry Jervis
, owed his rigid cast of mind to his upbringing in the Presbyterian Church of Scotland
(before a rather late conversion to Anglicanism
) and to his... |
Occupation | Richard Harris Barham | An ordained clergyman, he held many positions in the Church of England
, and lectured on divinity at St Paul's Cathedral. He was an adviser on Bentley's Miscellany and a founder member of the... |
Cultural formation | Jane Barker | Her father belonged to and participated in the local affairs of the Church of England
(into which Jane was baptised), but her mother's family had a tradition of Roman Catholicism
, to which as an... |
Dedications | Jane Barker | It appeared though Curll
and Rivington
, dedicated to the Countess of Nottingham
(an Anglican
who was said to be a Catholic
sympathiser). Its frontispiece is an engraving of the Crucifixion. It has recently been... |
Cultural formation | Mary Anne Barker | Brought up in the Church of England
, she drew deeply on her religious faith at such terrible times as that in India when her first husband died, Gilderdale, Betty. The Seven Lives of Lady Barker. Canterbury University Press. 86-7 |
Textual Production | Mary Anne Barker | This was a later series of what had begun in 1871 as Evening Hours, a Family Church of England
Magazine, edited by E. H. Bickersteth
, a hymn-writer and future bishop. MAB
ceased to... |
Cultural formation | Charlotte Barnard | CB
grew up as an English upper-class child, attending the local Anglican Church
. Her family had many servants, including a coachman, a housekeeper, two housemaids, a nurse and a cook. They also owned several... |
Cultural formation | Emilie Barrington | |
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 | Agnes Beaumont | AB
chose her own faith, joining first the Independents and then the Baptists
. Her family belonged to the Church of England
(though her elder brother seems to have been a dissenter like herself). |
No bibliographical results available.