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Ecclesiologist

Subject: History

Published by the Camden Society between 1841 and 1868, this journal greatly influenced the course of church building and restoration in the Victorian period. Its pages are now an important ...

Ecclesiologist, The

Ecclesiologist, The   Reference library

The Oxford Dictionary of Local and Family History

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2003
Subject:
History, Local and Family History
Length:
39 words

..., The . Published by the Camden Society between 1841 and 1868 , this journal greatly influenced the course of church building and restoration in the Victorian period. Its pages are now an important source of information about Victorian church...

Ecclesiologist, The

Ecclesiologist, The   Quick reference

The Oxford Companion to Local and Family History (2 ed.)

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2009
Subject:
History, Local and Family History
Length:
39 words

..., The Published by the Camden Society between 1841 and 1868 , this journal greatly influenced the course of church building and restoration in the Victorian period. Its pages are now an important source of information about Victorian church...

Ecclesiologist

Ecclesiologist  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
History
Published by the Camden Society between 1841 and 1868, this journal greatly influenced the course of church building and restoration in the Victorian period. Its pages are now an important source of ...
Daniel Rock

Daniel Rock  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Religion
(1799–1871), ecclesiologist and antiquary. His chief work, The Church of our Fathers (1849–53), did much to spread knowledge of English medieval religious ceremonial customs. He took an active part ...
Benjamin Webb

Benjamin Webb  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Religion
(1819–85), ecclesiologist. While still an undergraduate, with J. M. Neale he founded the Cambridge Camden Society (q.v.). He was a strictly moderate ceremonialist and never wore the Eucharistic ...
Jean-Baptiste-Antoine Lassus

Jean-Baptiste-Antoine Lassus  

Reference type:
Overview Page
(1807–57).French architect. A pupil of Lebas and Labrouste, he was an early student of Gothic. He worked on the restoration of Sainte-Chapelle, Paris (from 1838), especially its influential ...
John Rouse Bloxam

John Rouse Bloxam  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Religion
(1807–91), ceremonialist. A learned ecclesiologist, he was the real originator of the ceremonial revival in the C of E. As J. H. Newman's curate at Littlemore, he introduced various ornaments which ...
George Somers Leigh Clarke

George Somers Leigh Clarke  

Reference type:
Overview Page
(1825–82).British architect. A pupil of Charles Barry, he was an ingenious designer of office buildings on restricted sites. His General Credit and Discount Company Building, Lothbury, London (1866), ...
Cambridge Camden Society

Cambridge Camden Society  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Religion
A society founded in 1839 by J. M. Neale and B. Webb for the study of ecclesiastical art. Renamed the ‘Ecclesiological Society’ in 1846, it survived until 1868.
Rogue architecture

Rogue architecture  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Term used by H. S. Goodhart-Rendel to describe works by those Gothic-Revival architects, addicted to Go, whose whose works were not marked by scholarship, serenity, or tact. Among the more celebrated ...
Clement Charles Julian Webb

Clement Charles Julian Webb  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Philosophy
(1865–1954)Clement Charles Julian Webb was born in London on 25 June 1865 and died in Oxford on 5 October 1954. He was the son of Benjamin Webb, a noted ...
Sir George Gilbert Scott

Sir George Gilbert Scott  

Reference type:
Overview Page
(1811–78).Prolific English Gothic Revival architect. He was articled to James Edmeston (1791–1867) in 1827, who was better known as a writer of hymns (‘Lead us, Heavenly Father, lead us’ (1821) was ...
liturgiology

liturgiology  

Reference type:
Overview Page
The study of liturgy or liturgies leading to a revival (or interpretation) of liturgical forms, especially in relation to the Eucharist. It played an important part in late-C19 and C20 ecclesiastical ...
William Butterfield

William Butterfield  

Reference type:
Overview Page
(1814–1900).One of the most prolific and original English Gothic Revivalists, he was born in London, for a while worked with the Inwoods, and opened his own practice in 1840. From 1842 he was closely ...
Camden Society

Camden Society  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
History
Founded in 1838 in honour of W. Camden, for the purpose of publishing documents relating to the early history and literature of the British empire. In 1897 it was amalgamated with the Royal ...
George Edmund Street

George Edmund Street  

Reference type:
Overview Page
(1824–81), architect. Before 1849, he worked under G. G. Scott. He became a leader in the Gothic revival, was diocesan architect of Oxford, York, Ripon, and Winchester, and designed a number of ...
Ernst Friedrich Zwirner

Ernst Friedrich Zwirner  

Reference type:
Overview Page
(1802–61).German architect. A pupil of Schinkel (who demonstrated his confidence in the young man by supporting his appointment (1833) as Dombaumeister (Cathedral Architect) for the then unfinished ...
Henry Roberts

Henry Roberts  

Reference type:
Overview Page
(1803–76).British architect, born in Philadelphia, PA. He worked in Fowler's and R. Smirke's office before setting up his London practice in 1830, and in 1832 won the competition to design the new ...
John Mason Neale

John Mason Neale  

Reference type:
Overview Page
Subject:
Literature
(1818–66), High Church Anglican author and hymn-writer. Ordained in 1842, from 1846 he was warden of Sackville College, East Grinstead. In 1855 he founded the Sisterhood of St Margaret; this ...
Webb, Benjamin

Webb, Benjamin (1819–85)   Quick reference

The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (3 ed.)

Reference type:
Subject Reference
Current Version:
2014
Subject:
Religion
Length:
35 words

...Benjamin ( 1819–85 ), ecclesiologist . While still an undergraduate, with J. M. Neale he founded the Cambridge Camden Society (q.v.). He was a strictly moderate ceremonialist and never wore the Eucharistic...

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