Hutchinson, Lucy. Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson. Editor Sutherland, James, Oxford University Press.
169
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Lucy Hutchinson | LH
and her husband
became Baptists
: that is, they became convinced that infant baptism is wrong, and that people should be old enough to take the decision for themselves before they were baptised. Hutchinson, Lucy. Memoirs of the Life of Colonel Hutchinson. Editor Sutherland, James, Oxford University Press. 169 |
Cultural formation | Lucy Hutchinson | She grew up in the Puritan
part of the Anglican
faith. She came to share some of the beliefs of the Baptist
s, and later still of the Presbyterian
s or Independents
. She then... |
Cultural formation | Flora Klickmann | FK
grew up English, but was the daughter of an immigrant originally from Germany, and may have had a French grandmother, wife of the grandfather who had been born at Stettin in 1813. Her surname... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Edna Lyall | The Burges children's father, though he is against Pusey
ism, is broad-minded Lyall, Edna. The Burges Letters: A Record of Child Life in the Sixties. Longmans, Green, and Co. 33 |
Cultural formation | Carson McCullers | CMC
was a white middle-class American (of Irish, French Huguenot, and British descent), who grew up attending the Baptist
church and was baptised into it when she was nine. Dews, Carlos L., and Carson McCullers. “Chronology and Notes”. Complete Novels, Library of America, Literary Classics of the United States, pp. 807-27. 807 |
Cultural formation | Constance Naden | She was baptised into the Church of England
but while she lived with them attended, as they did, several different Baptist
chapels. CN
later became a student of science and a sceptic in matters of... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Constance Naden | Her maternal grandfather, J. C. Woodhill
, was a retired jeweller, a Baptist
elder, and a man of literary interests who possessed an extensive and eclectic library: a great book-lover in his retirement Hughes, William Richard et al. Constance Naden: A Memoir. Bickers and Son. 13 |
Cultural formation | Pandita Ramabai | While living in Silchar, she studied Christianity under the Baptist
missionary Isaac Allen
, much to her husband's disapproval. As a widow she carried these studies further. Burton, Antoinette. At the Heart of the Empire. University of California Press. 80 |
Cultural formation | Hesba Stretton | |
Cultural formation | Anna Trapnel | She experienced a spiritual awakening after hearing a sermon by Hugh Peter
when she was about nineteen, then in 1650 joined the Baptist
congregation of John Simpson
. Later she moved to the sect of... |
Cultural formation | Rebecca Travers | She was originally a Baptist
and was converted to Quakerism
by James Nayler
. She remained loyal to Nayler, even after he was disgraced and condemned by George Fox
. RT
organised the first women's... |
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 | Anne Wentworth | |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Anne Wentworth | Again, AW
comes straight to the point: her persecutions at the hands of her hard-hearted Yoak-Fellow and of eminent Baptists
are, she says, well known to Christians and even to her enemies around the city... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Anne Wentworth | This seems to be the testimony that AW
had promised in her earlier printed works. It repeats her history of personal and theological controversy, and likens her Baptist
opponents to Papists. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
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