Ashfield, Andrew. Email to Isobel Grundy about Eleanor Tatlock.
Dissenters
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Margiad Evans | ME
wrote that she hated many of the forms of Christianity and other religions . . . . because of the sacrifice at the centre of them—the sacrificial blood. This hatred was connected with her... |
Cultural formation | Eleanor Tatlock | She was a middle-class Englishwoman, fervently Evangelical and in sympathy with Dissenters
, who nevertheless continued to attend or at least embrace the sacraments of the Anglican church
. Tatlock, Eleanor. Poems. S. Burton. 2: 278 |
Cultural formation | Celia Fiennes | CF
's family were upper-class, linked to the nobility: distinguished anti-monarchists and dissenters
. She took her religion seriously: at the sight of a monument to Fulke Greville
which boasted his friendship with Sir Philip Sidney |
Cultural formation | Mary Taylor | |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Gilding | |
Cultural formation | Dora Greenwell | Presumably white, DG
was born into an upper-middle class family that was then comfortably off, but was financially devastated several years after her birth. Her religious allegiances present some confusion. She was brought up as... |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Singer Rowe | ESR
was an English middle-class dissenter
or more properly Independent
. Marshall, Madeleine Forell. “Review of Paula Backscheider on Elizabeth Singer Rowe”. Scriblerian, Vol. 48-49 , No. 2, 1, pp. 159-61. 160 |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Heyrick | She was born a Dissenter
and until her marriage attended the Presbyterian
church in East Bond Street, Leicester. John Wesley
visited the Coltman household during her youth. Later, during her widowhood, she became a Quaker
. Beale, Catherine Hutton, editor. Catherine Hutton and Her Friends. Cornish Brothers. 61 Aucott, Shirley. Women of Courage, Vision and Talent: lives in Leicester 1780 to 1925. Shirley Aucott. 121 |
Cultural formation | Catherine Hutton | CH
grew up in a Dissenting
family which suffered for its beliefs. She had a number of Quaker friends, to whom she unembarrassedly used thou and thee. She wrote that she almost became a... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Mary Gawthorpe | |
Occupation | Hannah More | Bere had already preached against Young; he now demanded his dismissal. At this point, unfortunately, Patty More
's journal of the period ends. Young was encouraging his adult pupils to extemporary prayer—something strongly disapproved by... |
Author summary | Elizabeth Bury | EB
was a seventeenth-century woman whose religious background (radical Anglican
, which after the Restoration became Dissenting
) encouraged her to acquire a scholarly education. Her spiritual life embraced the practice of diary- and... |
Textual Features | Catherine Hubback | The later dangers which Agnes faces are chiefly theological: she moves towards Dissent
and specifically Presbyterianism
, but returns to the Church of England
, saved in part by a copy of The Christian Year... |
Textual Production | Elizabeth Warren | |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Evelyn Underhill | This traces mystical beliefs and practice from the Bible, through the early days of Christianity, the medieval Catholic
mysticism of England and various European countries, to seventeenth-century Protestant
beliefs and practices, and finally to... |
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