Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Anglican Church
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Sarah Scott | She was born into an English land-owning family. As an adult, she was a devout and active Anglican
. |
Cultural formation | Clara Balfour | Herself baptised (after her father's death) into the Church of England
, she later converted and joined the Baptists
with the rest of her family in 1840. |
Cultural formation | Rhoda Broughton | |
Cultural formation | Mary Ann Browne | She grew up adhering to a private religion of her own, a Romantic religion of the imagination. In 1832, however, a kind of conversion experience made her a conventional Christian, an Anglican
like the rest... |
Cultural formation | Louisa Stuart Costello | Her family were professional people of Irish extraction. Sutherland, John, b. 1938. The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction. Stanford University Press, 1989. |
Cultural formation | Sarah Lady Piers | SLP
was born into the English gentry. Her poetry makes it clear that she was a pious Anglican
, a convinced Whig, and a patriotic supporter of the Protestant succession. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. |
Cultural formation | Harriett Mozley | Harriett remained committed to the Church of England
throughout her life and was deeply distressed when her brother John Henry Newman
converted to Catholicism. She evidently saw herself as something of a specialist in theological... |
Cultural formation | Thomas Hardy | He was baptised into the Church of England
, and as late as the age of twenty-five he was an assiduous church-goer, had some idea of becoming a clergyman, and involved himself deeply in such... |
Cultural formation | Jane Johnson | Susan E. Whyman
locates JJ
among English upper middling-sort women, below the level of gentry. Whyman, Susan E. The Pen and the People: English Letter Writers 1660-1800. Oxford University Press, 2009. 163 |
Cultural formation | Noel Streatfeild | |
Cultural formation | Samuel Beckett | The Becketts were of middle-class, solidly protestant, Anglo-Irish stock. Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/. Bair, Deirdre. Samuel Beckett: A Biography. Vintage, 1990. 4-5 |
Cultural formation | Maria Callcott | |
Cultural formation | Sarah Davy | SD
, apparently by birth an Englishwoman of the middling ranks and an Anglican
, converted, as one of the most significant actions of her life, to join an Independent
or Baptist
congregation. Some modern... |
Cultural formation | Eliza Parsons | She was born into the English provincial bourgeois or urban middling ranks, and was presumably white. She was an Anglican
whose staunch commitment to Protestantism, suspicion of other branches of faith, and dogged belief in... |
Cultural formation | Margaret Forster | As a child she knelt at bedtime to say her prayers: she loved praying and did it with great intensity. After the regulation Gentle Jesus, meek and mild, she would talk to Jesus (rather than... |
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