Roman Catholic Church

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Cultural formation Graham Greene
Born into the English professional class, GG became a RomanCatholic because of the woman he married. He always remained a Catholic, but his novels frequently treat the pain of conflicted religious belief, and late in...
Cultural formation Elizabeth Inchbald
Her husband, like her parents, was Roman Catholic . Despite periods when she neglected churchgoing or doubted her faith, she considered herself a Catholic to the end of her life. She was particularly devout in...
Cultural formation John Henry Newman
Brought up, educated, and ordained in the Anglican Church , JHN began, with others, to entertain fears for its future as a national church. Emancipation of Catholics and Dissenters led them to suppose that the...
Cultural formation Lady Jane Lumley
By birth and marriage LJL belonged to the English nobility. Her father was sharply attentive to issues of rank. LJL was born at almost the same time as the Church of England , and her...
Cultural formation Ann Bridge
AB was received into the Catholic Church in Farm Street, London, by Father Charles Martindale .
Hoehn, Matthew, editor. Catholic Authors. St Mary’s Abbey, 1952.
Cultural formation Shelagh Delaney
SD grew up in a working-class family in Lancashire. Though her father was Catholic as well as half-Irish, she did not consider herself to be Catholic.
“Meeting Shelagh Delaney”. Times, 2 Feb. 1959, p. 12.
12
Cunningham, John, fl. 1976. “The Salford Madonna”. The Guardian, 4 Aug. 1976.
When she became famous at the age of...
Cultural formation Una Troubridge
When UT travelled to Florence to visit cousins in 1907, she found herself attracted to the Catholic faith; she later converted to Roman Catholicism . She had previously studied various Eastern religions, including Buddhism, Bushido...
Cultural formation Margaret Roper
MR was born into the increasingly confident and accomplished English, professional, urban class. As she grew up she participated to the full in her father's strongly held conviction that the true faith was the old...
Cultural formation Seamus Heaney
He grew up surrounded by casual English and Ulster Protestant prejudice against Catholics , and was accustomed to being regarded as a second-class citizen.
Fox, Margaret, journalist, and James, Jr McKinley. “Keeper of the Irish Essence”. The Globe and Mail, 31 Aug. 2013, p. S12.
Though some commentators presented Heaney as no longer a believer, he...
Cultural formation Julian of Norwich
Julian of Norwich was a Roman Catholic (like everyone in England at the time). It is not known when she became an anchoress, or what her life had been before that. Her family may have...
Cultural formation Constance Countess Markievicz
Shortly after her first release from prison, Irish nationalist Constance, Countess Markievicz, became a Roman Catholic .
Marreco, Anne. The Rebel Countess: The Life and Times of Constance Markievicz. Chilton Books, 1967.
234
Cultural formation Florence Dixie
Two of the older children willingly followed their mother into the Roman Catholic Church. Florence and her twin went through the terrors of a first confession, but as she later put it, [h]uman nature does...
Cultural formation Anna Kingsford
All that came to her, she believed, came by illumination because of a past birth, and because she pushed [herself] on to a point of spiritual evolution somewhat in advance of the rest of...
Cultural formation Jane Barker
JB converted to Catholicism (as her poems relate), and to its attendant difficulties and discrimination.
King, Kathryn R., and Jeslyn Medoff. “Jane Barker and Her Life (1652-1732): The Documentary Record”. Eighteenth-Century Life, Vol.
21
, No. 3, Nov. 1997, pp. 16-38.
21-2
Myers, Joanne. “Jane Barker’s Conversion and the Forms of Religious Experience”. Eighteenth-Century Fiction, Vol.
30
, No. 3, 1 Mar.–31 May 2018, pp. 369-93.
369
Cultural formation Caroline Chisholm
Near the time of her marriage, CC converted to Catholicism , her husband's faith. From this point onwards she remained a devout Catholic.
Kiddle, Margaret, and Sir Douglas Copland. Caroline Chisholm. 2nd ed., Melbourne University Press, 1957.
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