|
| |
| | List of University of Oxford people - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | William Gladstone 1868-1874, 1880-1885, 1886, 1892-1894 (Christ Church) |  | | William Wyndham Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville 1806-1807 (Christ Church) |  | | William Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland 1783, 1807-1809 (Christ Church) |
|
http://www.hartselle.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/List_of_notable_Oxford_students
(524 words)
|
|
| |
| | Elizabethan Catholics and the Mass |
 | | While the English youths, gathered by Allen, lived in the seminary, built and governed on the model of an Oxford College, they were able to attend the lectures on doctrine at the University, and at the same time lead their own religious life. |  | | For the majority of Englishmen believed still in their hearts that the Catholic religion was right, but in practice and from fear went to the new Church. |  | | After the removal and death of the old priests she calculated that the new ministers would receive recognition and the new religion would become firmly rooted in the land. |
|
http://www.sspx.ca/Angelus/1982_November/Elizabethan_Catholics.htm
(3818 words)
|
|
| |
| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: William Allen |
 | | On the accession of Elizabeth, and the re-establishment of Protestantism, Allen was one of those who remained most stanch on the Catholic side, and it is chiefly due to his labours that the Catholic religion was not entirely stamped out in England. |  | | And the success of the "Seminary Priests", as they were called, was such that at the end of Elizabeth's long reign it is said that the kingdom was still at heart more than half Catholic. |  | | There were practically no Catholic bishops left, and the Marian clergy were rapidly dying out. |
|
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01322b.htm
(1679 words)
|
|
| |
| | CNN Transcript - CNN Today: Cardinal Keeler Remembers Cardinal John O'Connor - May 4, 2000 |
 | | Cardinal O'Connor was devoted to the teachings of our faith. |  | | ALLEN: Right, as we learned in the story that we just aired that he was very much a leader in bringing different faiths together. |  | | ALLEN: And he stayed very loyal to the Pope and to the teachings of Catholicism despite others in this country who had different views on things. |
|
http://edition.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0005/04/tod.09.html
(808 words)
|
|
| |
| | From the Housetops.com |
 | | The reason given by Father Allen for the project of vernacularizing the Bible was that of alleviating the handicap to Catholics, where the priest did not “commonly have at hand a quote from Scripture save in the Latin,” when dealing with the heretics. |  | | It was of the utmost importance that the missionary priest should be thoroughly familiar with the whole of it and “have at his fingers’ ends” the passages in dispute between Catholics and the Reformers. |  | | Now the next step in the realization of Father Allen’s plans began to take shape: that plan, of course, being the establishment of an English college which would be attached to the University of Douay, and which would be used to supply the English Church with good Catholic priests. |
|
http://www.fromthehousetops.com/catalog/fthsample53.php?osCsid=af5a5d94f2d35defd1a823b2bc4484b2
(4887 words)
|
|
| |
| | William Cardinal Allen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | On the accession of Elizabeth, he refused the oath of supremacy and was disciplined, but remained in the university until 1561. |  | | The idea subsequently developed into the establishing of a missionary college, or seminary, to supply priests to England as long as the country remained separated from the Holy See. |  | | Allen moved his establishment to Reims under the protection of the house of Guise; and it was here that the English translation of the Scriptures, known as the Douai Version, was begun under his direction. |
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Cardinal_Allen
(1058 words)
|
|
| |
| | Envoy Magazine - Volume 5.2 |
 | | Cardinal William Allen started the college in order to educate young Catholics not allowed to exercise their religion under the harsh laws of Elizabeth I, who reigned from 1558 to 1603. |  | | In other words, Allen wanted the opportunity to practice his faith (saying Mass, hearing confession, baptizing children, anointing the sick) in full view, without the threat of persecution or bodily harm. |  | | In this book, Burleigh redefined treason (a capital offense) to include Catholic worship and practice. |
|
http://www.envoymagazine.com/backissues/5.2/martyrs.htm
(1972 words)
|
|
| |
| | National Catholic Reporter: Electing a new pope April 19, 2005 |
 | | That left Fessio to explain to Ratzinger that his publishing house -- the one to whom the cardinal had signed over all his American rights -- had no structural ties to the Catholic church at all. |  | | Perhaps it is fate that the day was Holy Saturday and his parents were Joseph and Mary -- eerie foreshadowing for a child who would grow up to become a stark sign of contradiction in the world's largest Christian church. |  | | It would be a theological form of fighting fire with fire. |
|
http://www.nationalcatholicreporter.org/update/conclave/pt041905e.htm
(7924 words)
|
|
| |
| | WESTBY |
 | | A second daughter Elizabeth Latus and a son Ralph Latus are also in their father's will. |  | | A list of names of recusants prepared in 1595 includes Elizabeth Lewteth - surely Lewtas with a lisp - living as a servant in the house of 'Anne Westbye of Mowbreake, widowe late wife of John Westbye esquire of ffaire lands and riche in goods'. |  | | Gilbert's son and heir William Latewis was 24 when his father died in 1568. |
|
http://freespace.virgin.net/mc.storey/WESTBY.html
(681 words)
|
|
| |
| | The Roman Catholic Diocese of Westminster - Diocese |
 | | Allen Hall, following the guidelines of Pastores Dabo Vobis, seeks the best human, spiritual, pastoral and intellectual formation of its students. |  | | Later the student may choose, if he wishes, to see one of the external spiritual directors selected from the Colleges's approved list of spiritual directors. |  | | Allen Hall seeks to teach competently the philosophical and theological subjects prescribed by Church authority. |
|
http://www.rcdow.org.uk/diocese?content_ref=307
(532 words)
|
|
| |
| | The Bristows in American Government |
 | | Many of them were associated with the Church, particularly with Mahnesbury Abbey in Wiltshire; and it is likely that eminent Catholic divine, Richard Bristow, born, 1538, in Worcester, was one of them. |  | | We shall begin with the ancestry of the latter two first. |  | | He with William Cardinal Allen revised the "Douay Bible," and was considered one of the two most learned men at Oxford during the time of Queen Elizabeth. |
|
http://www.webcom.com/duane/bristow.html
(4991 words)
|
|
| |
| | The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical Dictionary - Consistory of August 7, 1587 |
 | | Edited the vernacular version of the Sacred Scriptures known as the Douai Bible; the New testament was published in 1582 in Reims, where the college had temporarily moved and was under his presidency; and the Old Testament was published in Douai in 1609. |  | | The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical Dictionary - Consistory of August 7, 1587 |  | | Created cardinal priest in the consistory of August 7, 1587 |
|
http://www.fiu.edu/~mirandas/bios1587.htm
(946 words)
|
|
| |
| | Catholic Culture : Document Library : Douay-Rheims: a Story of Faith |
 | | The principal translator was Father Gregory Martin, who had joined the exiles at Douay in 1570 so he could freely practice his religion. |  | | Many recusants fled the island to maintain their faith. |  | | A major refuge for these exiles was the town of Douai (Anglicized to "Doway" and, later, "Douay") where an English college had been established by Father (later Cardinal) William Allen to train priests. |
|
http://www.catholicculture.org/docs/doc_view.cfm?recnum=1061
(1877 words)
|
|
| |
| | Douai -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | The Roman Catholics addressed themselves affirmatively to the same problem faced by the Anglican Church: a Bible in the vernacular. |  | | The New Testament appeared in 1582, but the Old Testament, delayed by lack... |  | | (153294), English cardinal and Biblical scholar, born in Lancashire; educated at Oxford; fled England 1565 under political pressure after refusing to recognize the authority of Queen Elizabeth I over the church; ordained priest in Mechelen, Spanish Netherlands; founded seminary in Douai 1568; supervised the Roman Catholic Reims-Douai translation of the Bible and... |
|
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9031015?tocId=9031015
(536 words)
|
|
| |
| | Allusions to Edmund Campion in Twelfth Night |
 | | In this exchange, we see that Campion, having been deprived of the means of preparing a defense, such as access to books containing the teachings of St. |  | | It is reason that I should oppose once." |  | | William Cardinal Allen, A Brief History of the Glorious Martyrdom of the 12 Revenend Priests: Fr. |
|
http://www.everreader.com/allusio3.htm
(4264 words)
|
|
| |
| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Richard Bristow |
 | | His great ability would probably have won further promotion for him had not his religious opinions undergone a change, an indication of which was given in his argument with the Regius Professor of Divinity, whom he confuted. |  | | Recognizing his marked talent Allen secured him for his new college at Douai and appointed him its first prefect of studies. |  | | Bristow is best known, however, as an earnest student, a powerful controversial writer, and, with Allen, as one of the revisers of the Douay Bible. |
|
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02791a.htm
(488 words)
|
|
| |
| | History 3 |
 | | The Government hoped that Catholicism would gradually fade from memory as the Marian priests died out and people found compulsory attendance at the parish church a more attractive option to financial penalties or social marginalisation. |  | | The situation was largely changed by Cardinal William Allen, the founder of a system of English seminaries overseas which would provide the struggling Catholic Church in England with an orthodox education and new blood in the form of priests. |  | | Catholics were still a substantial minority, especially at Court (for example William Byrd, the composer), but they increasingly found it difficult to find priests. |
|
http://www.englishcollegerome.org/pages/history3.htm
(590 words)
|
|
| |
| | About the Douay Rheims HTML Bible |
 | | A series of notes was added, designed to answer the theological arguments of the Reformers; these were prepared by Allen, assisted by Bristowe and Worthington. |  | | The rendering of some of the texts showed evident signs of controversial bias, and it became of the first importance for the English Catholics of the day to be furnished with a translation of their own, on the accuracy of which they could depend and to which they could appeal in the course of argument. |  | | Several Protestant editions have appeared, the best known being a curious work by Rev. William Fulke, first published in 1589, with the Reims text and that of the Bishops' Bible in parallel columns. |
|
http://www.christianisrael.com/douay/about.htm
(1632 words)
|
|
| |
| | Dr. Gene Scott Bible Collection Tour, Station 43 |
 | | The Catholic text was printed in England, side-by-side with the Bishops' Version (Station 19) by William Fulke, who intended to "confute" the Catholics, but by so doing the many merits of the Rheims version became apparent; unwittingly, Fulke popularized what he detested! |  | | William Fulke, Doctor of Divinity and Master of Pembroke College, Cambridge, attempted to "confute" the Rheims New Testament of 1582 (the English Roman Catholic version), intending to answer the criticisms of the Church of England which are set forth within the Rheims notes. |  | | It is worth noting that a second edition of this Old Testament was printed at Douay in 1635, then, for a period of 115 years (1635-1750) no more printings of the English Catholic Bible or its separate Testaments were made! |
|
http://www.drgenescott.org/stn43.htm
(722 words)
|
|
| |
| | 1532 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | January 31 - Edward Sutton, 2nd Baron Dudley (born 1460) |  | | Andrea Briosco, Italian sculptor and architect (born 1470) |  | | December 11 - Pietro Accolti, cardinal of Ancona (born 1455) |
|
http://www.peekskill.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/1532
(281 words)
|
|
| |
| | [No title] |
 | | Amen, I say to you, this generation shall not pass away till all things be fulfilled. |  | | This e-text comes from multiple editions of Challoner's revised Douay-Rheims Version of the Holy Bible. |  | | In October, 1578, Gregory Martin began the work of preparing an English translation of the Bible for Catholic readers, the first such translation into Modern English. |
|
http://www.preteristarchive.com/Books/1586_douay-rheims-bible.html
(6054 words)
|
|
| |
| | Georgetown: The Milton House Archives: Register |
 | | copy of three letters from English Benedictines acknowledging William Bishop, Bishop of Chalcedon, as Ordinary of England. |  | | Subject: Copy of letter of Augustine, Prior of English Benedictine monks at Douai, to Nicholas Fitzherbert on the institution of Bishops in England. |  | | Subject: Discussion of state of Catholics in England, especially tension among clergy, appointment of a Bishop, and appointment of a Cardinal Protector. |
|
http://gulib.lausun.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/miltreg.htm
(3312 words)
|
|
| |
| | Comments on The Bible |
 | | The Church found it convenient to foster this belief until well into the 16th century, but the die had been cast, and the plowboys constituted a ready audience for scripture that they could understand without the intervention of the corrupt clergy. |  | | In 1526, William Tyndale and Miles Cloverdale, working from the Septuagint and Hebrew texts as well as the established Vulgate, published what can be considered the first modern English Bible. |  | | This left English speaking Catholics with the Latin Vulgate, which precious few of them could read, as their only source of Sacred Scripture. |
|
http://www.datasync.com/~wizard/Bible.html
(9128 words)
|
|
| |
| | Articles - Oriel College, Oxford |
 | | Rowing is carried out by the boat-house across Christ Church Meadow. |  | | William Young Sellar - Fellow: Scottish classical scholar. |  | | Cardinal William Allen - Undergraduate 1547: Principal (St Mary Hall) 1556 - ~1558, Cardinal. |
|
http://www.gaple.com/articles/Oriel_College,_Oxford?mySession=ea44fea0896135bb01c90641eeaf2979
(2252 words)
|
|
| |
| | William Allen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This is a disambiguation page, a list of pages that otherwise might share the same title. |  | | William Allen (died 1891), justice of Massachusetts supreme court |  | | William Allen is the name of several notable people: |
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Allen
(164 words)
|
|
| |
| | WILLIAM ALLEN - LoveToKnow Article on WILLIAM ALLEN |
 | | One of his first acts was to issue, under his own name, two violent works for the purpose of inciting the Catholics of England to rise against Elizabeth: " The Declaration of the Sentence of Sixtus V." a broadside, and a book, An Admonition to the nobility and people of England (Antwerp, 1588). |  | | Sir William Stanley, an English officer, had surrendered Deventer to the Spaniards; and Alien wrote a book in defence of Stanley, saying that all Englishmen were bound, under pain of damnation, to fqjlow the traitorous example, as Elizabeth was no lawful queen. |  | | The rift became so great that ten years after his death, Agazzari could write to Parsons: " So long as Alien walked in this matter (the scheme for England) in union with and fidelity to the Company, as he used to do, God preserved |
|
http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/A/AL/ALLEN_WILLIAM.htm
(1123 words)
|
|
| |
| | Biographies: Robert Catesby |
 | | Robert's father, Sir William Catesby, was a conscientious adherent to the Catholic faith, a prime supporter of the Jesuit mission and one of the leaders of the catholic cause, for which he suffered greatly. |  | | This school, founded by Cardinal William Allen for the training of clergy for the English mission but extended to education of the laity, provided an austere and rigorous course of education in scholastic and moral theology, classical languages and the history of the English church. |  | | The following year upon the death of his grandmother, he came into the large estate of Chastleton, Oxon, making him a man of considerable means in his own right. |
|
http://www.britannia.com/history/r-catesby.html
(1989 words)
|
|
| |
| | Manchester Religious and Lancashire Philanthropists have included Bishop James Fraser, Sir Ashton Lever, Cardinal ... |
 | | William Allen, born in 1532 at Rossall near Fleetwood in Lancashire, went on to become a leading Cardinal and spiritual leader of English Catholics during the Elizabethan period and at a time of great Catholic persecution in England. |  | | He spent his last years at the college which he had founded in Rome. |  | | In 1561 he joined the exiles in Louvain, and in the following year he returned to England, where he made Oxford his base, from which he spent around two years roaming the countryside arguing the Catholic case and boosting Catholic morale. |
|
http://www.manchester2002-uk.com/celebs/philanthropy4.html
(2008 words)
|
|
| |
| | Parson Chair -- Recommendations and Resources |
 | | William Blackstone's ''Commentaries on the Laws of England'' says that a ''parson'' is a parish priest with the fullest legal rights to the parish properties: :A parson, ''persona ecclesiae'', is one that has full possession of all the rights of a parochial church. |  | | He is called parson, ''persona'', because by his person the church, which is an invisible body, is represented; and he is in himself a body corporate, in order to protect and defend the rights of the church (which he personates) by a perpetual succession. |  | | He had hoped to succeed Allen as Cardinal on the latter's death. |
|
http://www.becomingapediatrician.com/health/114/parson-chair.html
(1581 words)
|
|
| |
| | x_3 |
 | | When Father Martin published his A Discouverie of the Manifold Corruptions of the Holy Scriptures (1582) as a companion handbook to the Rheims New Testament, William Fulke’s rage could not be contained. |  | | This first translation of the New Testament into English by Catholic scholars was brought into this world most reluctantly and was to suffer incredible abuse. |  | | This infuriated many of Allen’s English Catholic supporters. |
|
http://www.smu.edu/bridwell/x_3.htm
(873 words)
|
|
| |
| | Bona Allen |
 | | Blna Dea 2: In Roman mythology, '''Bona Dea''' ("the good goddess") was a goddess of fert 4: ng with the words "wine" and " myrtle " because Boan Dea had once been beaten by her father with a myr 15: it:Bona Dea |  | | Allen is the name of a number of places in the United States ofAmerica. |  | | See also List of people by name: A, List of people by name: Al Roads named after Alpen : |
|
http://www.super8filmmaking.com/tail/42861-bona-allen.html
(339 words)
|
|
| |
| | History News Service |
 | | There, Allen managed to survive nightmarish discrimination and was promoted to the majors the following year. |  | | Allen, who starred for the Philadelphia Phillies and Chicago White Sox in the 1960s and '70s, has been relegated to infamy by baseball writers such as Bill James who view him as a "malcontent" who "used racism as an explosive to blow his teams apart." |  | | Years later it was revealed that Thomas had been aiming racial slurs to many of his black teammates. |
|
http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~hns/articles/2005/080805a.html
(845 words)
|
|
| |
| | Reading Your Way Through History |
 | | Paul O'Sullivan, O.P. Fabiola: or the Church of the Catacombs by Cardinal Wiseman |  | | 13th Century A.D. The Lost Baron by Allen French (1200) |  | | The Martyrdom of Father Campion and His Companions by William Cardinal Allen |
|
http://www.readingyourwaythroughhistory.com
(2698 words)
|
|
| |
| | Elizabethan Catholics |
 | | The two universities (Oxford and Cambridge) were also purged of Catholics. |  | | William Allen, one of these ejected dons, went to Louvain and helped organize the printing of Catholic propaganda in English. |  | | Cardinal William Allen was given the task of restoring England to Catholicism if the Spanish invasion succeeded and he published an Admonition to the English encouraging them to revolt against the "deposed" "bastard" Elizabeth. |
|
http://history.wisc.edu/sommerville/361/361-18.htm
(868 words)
|
|
| |
| | Catalogue of the Catholic Central Library |
 | | True devotion to the Blessed Virgin tr from the original French by Frederick William Faber. |
|
http://www.catholic-library.org.uk/catalogue/search_results.php?action=find_subject&cur_page=28&find=
(755 words)
|
|
| |
| | St Philip's Books - Secondhand Books |
 | | A True, Sincere and Modest Defence of English Catholics That Suffer for their Faith Both at Home and Abroad, Against a False, Seditious and Slanderous Libel, Entitled: "The Execution of Justice in England". |  | | Thomas Wolsey late Cardinal: His Life and Death by George Cavendish his Gentleman-Usher. |  | | [X1503] SERGEANT, J. An Account of the Chapter Erected by William, Titular Bishop of Chalcedon, and Ordinary of England and Scotland. |
|
http://www.stphilipsbooks.co.uk/churchr
(1742 words)
|
|
| |
| | Free Church Websites - Somewhere, TN - Your Church Slogan Here |
 | | It was translated by Gregory Martin, an Oxford-trained scholar, working in the circle of English Catholic exiles on the Continent, under the sponsorship of William (later Cardinal) Allen. |  | | The fountainhead of that stream was William Tyndale's New Testament of 1526; marking its course were the King James Version of 1611 (KJV), the Revised Version of 1885 (RV), the American Standard Version of 1901 (ASV), and the Revised Standard Version of 1952 and 1971 (RSV). |  | | In that stream, faithfulness to the text and vigorous pursuit of accuracy were combined with simplicity, beauty, and dignity of expression. |
|
http://church.icglink.net/versions.cfm?frm=holy
(1271 words)
|
|
| |
| | MEMED 1. Pope Sixtus V's 1588 Bull against Queen Elizabeth, in support of the Armada |
 | | Commentary: This document is typical of the form of reasoning of the political casuistry of the Elizabethan Catholic apologists. |  | | If quoted, mention of the origin of the electronic document and its creator is expected. |  | | The supranational Catholic allegiance is expected to transcend national allegiance. |
|
http://alor.univ-montp3.fr/MEMED/1Sixtus5Eliz.html
(918 words)
|
|
| |
| | Nominal Thread |
 | | for the king to come and punish "this woman, hated by God and man." After much negotiation, he was made cardinal by Pope Sixtus V on the 7th of August 1587, nominally to supply the loss of the queen of Scotland, but in reality to ensure the success of the Armada. |  | | Pope Gregory XIV made him librarian at the Vatican; and he served on the commission for... |  | | On his promotion Allen wrote to Reims that he owed the... |
|
http://www.lindacannongallery.com/63/93.html
(1221 words)
|
|
| |
| | Famous Oxonians: About Oxford University - University of Oxford central web pages |
 | | Throughout its history, Oxford has produced gifted men and women in every sphere of human endeavour who have studied or taught at the University. |  | | Among these are six kings, 46 Nobel prize-winners, 25 UK Prime Ministers, six current holders of the Order of Merit, plus three saints, 86 Archbishops and 18 Cardinals. |  | | Ivy Williams, first female barrister in the UK Pixley Seme, founder of the African National Congress |
|
http://www.ox.ac.uk/aboutoxford/famous.shtml
(496 words)
|
|
| |
| | Search Results for parson - Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Jesuit who, with Cardinal William Allen, organized Roman Catholic resistance in England to the Protestant regime of Queen Elizabeth I. He favoured armed intervention by the continental Catholic... |  | | American sociologist and scholar whose theory of social action influenced the intellectual bases of several disciplines of modern sociology. |
|
http://www.britannica.com/search?query=parson&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT
(412 words)
|
|
| |
| | William_Stanley_(Elizabethan) |
 | | Shortly after the event, Cardinal William Allen wrote a pamphlet defending Stanley's actions with a view to justifying the assassination of Elizabeth I as provided for in the bull Regnans in Excelsis. |  | | Despite Leicester having defended his loyalty to the suspicious Dutch, Stanley betrayed the town to the Spanish, the day after Zutphen had similarly been betrayed by the English commander Rowland York (January 28). |
|
http://www.tuxedo-shop.com/search.php?title=William_Stanley_(Elizabethan)
(236 words)
|
|
| |
| | Catholic Online - Saints & Angels - Bl. Martyrs of Douai |
 | | A group of 160 priests trained at the English College of Douai, in France. |  | | They were martyred in England and Wales during the century following the foundation of the famed college by Cardinal William Allen in 1568. |
|
http://sbastore.horizon3group.com/saints/saint.php?saint_id=4766
(102 words)
|
|
| |
| | Ushaw College |
 | | Ushaw College (or St. Cuthbert's College, Ushaw) is situated about four and a half miles North West of Durham city and, since its foundation in 1808, has been primarily concerned with educating students for the Catholic priesthood. |  | | It is a direct descendant of the English College at Douai in France which was founded in 1568 by William (later Cardinal) Allen. |  | | The three coneys (on the right of the crest) are from the family crest of William Allen. |
|
http://www.dur.ac.uk/b.m.hodgson/ushaw
(240 words)
|
|
| |
| | Chronology - Elizabeth I |
 | | 18 March - The attempted assassination of William of Orange, leader of the Dutch revolt against Spanish rule in which he loses the ability to speak through injury, and becomes known as William The Silent. |  | | James VI is captured by the English party while out hunting, and kept in captivity until June 1583 |  | | William of Orange accepts the sovereignty of the northern Netherlands |
|
http://www.elizabethi.org/uk/chronology/two.html
(1281 words)
|
|
| |
| | Georgetown: The Milton House Archives - Outline |
 | | Among the more prominent authors of letters are Robert Parsons (or Persons), S.J., one of the first missionaries to Protestant England; Thomas Fitzherbert, agent for the English Catholic clergy in Rome; and Cardinal William Allen. |  | | This finding aid is divided into segments for rapid access. |
|
http://gulib.lausun.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/miltout.htm
(45 words)
|
|
| |
| | Wright book online - - books to read |
 | | James Lane Allen William K Bottorff - A Kentucky Cardinal, Aftermath, and Other Works - 0808402005 |
|
http://www.booksearchbytitle.com/428406_wright_0880484454americanpsychiatricpressreviewofpsychiatrysectionicognitivetherapbookstoread.html
(177 words)
|
|
| |
| | The San Antonio College LitWeb James Lane Allen Page |
 | | A Kentucky Cardinal, Aftermath, and Other Selected Works was published by College and University Press, 1967. |  | | A sequel to A Kentucky Cardinal The two works were published together in 1900. |  | | Grant C. Knight, James Lane Allen and the Genteel Tradition. |
|
http://www.accd.edu/sac/English/bailey/allenjl.htm
(115 words)
|
|
|