Harris, Mary J. Y. Memoirs of Frances Mary Peard. W. H. Smith.
18
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Publishing | Christabel Coleridge | During the time CC
and Yonge co-wrote novels, they also co-edited the Evangelical journal The Monthly Packet. Coleridge eventually succeeded Yonge as editor. Harris, Mary J. Y. Memoirs of Frances Mary Peard. W. H. Smith. 18 |
Cultural formation | Mary Elizabeth Coleridge | Her family had strong ties to the Church of England
and she remained a devoted Christian throughout her life, though she did not share her father's fondness for sermons. Stanford, Donald E., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 19. Gale Research. 77-8 |
Cultural formation | Sara Coleridge | |
Cultural formation | Christabel Coleridge | CC
, granddaughter of Samuel Taylor Coleridge
, was named after his poetic heroine Christabel. She grew up in an English, presumably white, middle-class, literary, Anglican
family. She later held Conservative views, especially on women's rights. 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. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
Cultural formation | Jane Collier | |
Cultural formation | Mary Maria Colling | Baptised a Congregationalist
, that is in contemporary terms a Dissenter
, MMC
later became a practising Anglican
. She was deeply religious. “FamilySearch Internet Genealogy Service”. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Bray, Anna Eliza, and Mary Maria Colling. “Letters to Robert Southey”. Fables and Other Pieces in Verse by M.M. Colling, Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green, pp. 1-85. 17 An Independent church in England is normally Congregational, though the Wesleyan Independent sect also existed. Bozman, Ernest Franklin, editor. Everyman’s Encyclopaedia. J. M. Dent. |
Cultural formation | Ivy Compton-Burnett | Both parents came from Dissenting
backgrounds; Ivy's maternal grandfather was a fervent Methodist
. She herself, after inventing fictitious deities as a child and being baptised and confirmed in the Anglican
church, chose from an... |
Cultural formation | William Congreve | He was born into the northern English minor country gentry, but he grew up (as an Anglican
) in Ireland, spending his childhood and youth there. |
Cultural formation | Anne Conway | |
death | Anne Conway | More commented, I perceive and bless God for it, that my Lady Conway was my Lady Conway to her Last Breath. Conway, Anne et al. The Conway Letters. Editor Hutton, Sarah, Clarendon Press. 451 |
Cultural formation | Cassandra Cooke | She belonged securely to the English professional or gentry class, and to the Church of England
. |
Family and Intimate relationships | Cassandra Cooke | CC
's elder son, Theophilus, was born in 1776. His mother was trying in 1799, after his graduation, to get him a parish, and in 1802 to get him a better one. Her younger son... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Maria Susanna Cooper | Maria Susanna Bransby
married Samuel Cooper
, who had taken his BA degree only the year before, but who was ordained in the Church of England
in 1763 and was then appointed Rector of Yelverton... |
Cultural formation | Maria Susanna Cooper | |
Cultural formation | Frances Cornford | She was brought up an agnostic, and not christened until about 1894, by which time, under the influence of the Christian message delivered in works like Charlotte Yonge
's The Daisy Chain, she had... |
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