The English Church: From the Accession of Charles I. to the Death of Anne (1625-1714) (Classic Reprint)

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FB&C Limited, 23‏/07‏/2015 - 394 من الصفحات
Excerpt from The English Church: From the Accession of Charles I. To the Death of Anne (1625-1714)

II. The English Church from the Norman Conquest to the Close of the Thirteenth Century, by Dean Stephens, D.D. Ready.

III. The English Church in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries. By the Rev. W. W. Capes, m.a., late Fellow of Queen's College, Oxford. Ready.

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نبذة عن المؤلف (2015)

William Holden Hutton (1860 - 1930) was a British historian and a presbyter of the Church of England. He was Dean of Winchester Cathedral from 1919 to 1930. William Holden Hutton was born in Britain on 24 May 1860, in Lincolnshire, where his father was rector of Gate Burton. He studied at [[Magdalen College, Oxford]], where he graduated with a first class degree in modern history in 1881. He was a Fellow at St John's College, Oxford, from 1884 to 1923, and an honorary Fellow thereafter; and from 1889 to 1909 was a tutor at the College. in 1903 he delivered the Bampton lectures. Between 1895 and 1897 he also lectured on Church history at Cambridge University. During this period he had a house at Burford; and he wrote about Burford and the Cotswolds in some of his books. In 1911 at the prompting of bishop Carr Glyn of Peterborough he began serving as Archdeacon of Northampton, and Canon Residentiary of Peterborough Cathedral. During this period he revisited Oxford as a University reader in Indian history. He found that the climate at Peterborough was not good for his health. From 1919 he accepted the deanery of Winchester cathedral, with a house suitable for his large library. His continuing ill-health did not prevent him from being a ready host. He was also a generous helper to the young. He wrote several historical works, chiefly on the Church in Britain, and was also a copious reviewer. He also authored the biography of Richard Wellesley (1893) for the Rulers of India series.

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