This article discusses and evaluates the historiographical workof a leading Oxford convert and Ultramontane, Thomas Allies (1813-1903). An evaluation of Allies by the criteria of the Ultramontane scholarship he endeavoured to practise allows the article to offer an illustration of the difficulty in establishing and maintaining an autonomous Catholic scholarship during the nineteenth century's secularising development of academic activity. It also allows substantial description of the patterns of nineteenth-century Catholic historical thought, noting the strength of its commitment to providentialism and, in particular, its apocalyptic character. An examination of the influences brought to bear on the subject's thought during the formative pe...
Volume XXXII (Supplement) of The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman, published in October 2008...
John Cumming (1807-1881) was the popular minister of the Crown Court Church of Scotland in London\u2...
This article retraces the infamous controversies between the Edinburgh Review and Oxford in the earl...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.This article discusses and evaluates the historiographical wor...
John Henry Newman (1801-1890) was one of the outstanding religious thinkers of the nineteenth centu...
John Scarisbrick pursued a distinguished academic career and was appointed Professor of History at t...
The article describes the religious situation in the 19th-century England with special emphasis on t...
This dissertation provides an analysis of the attempts by John Henry Newman to account for the histo...
The history of doctrine has been shaped by its historiographers. Prominent among nineteenth-century ...
This dissertation is a dual case study of two institutions, St. John’s College, Oxford and the Merch...
Christendom, understood as that complex relationship between Christianity and culture, Church and S...
The article concerns the idea of University in the thought of John Henry Newman In particular the re...
Article commemorates the centennial of the hymn of 'Kindly Light', written by John Henry Newman. Div...
© 2015 Michael Philip FrancisThis thesis examines the foundation of Newman College within the Univer...
During the 1860\u27s Henry Edward Manning, who had recently converted to Roman Catholicism, advanced...
Volume XXXII (Supplement) of The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman, published in October 2008...
John Cumming (1807-1881) was the popular minister of the Crown Court Church of Scotland in London\u2...
This article retraces the infamous controversies between the Edinburgh Review and Oxford in the earl...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.This article discusses and evaluates the historiographical wor...
John Henry Newman (1801-1890) was one of the outstanding religious thinkers of the nineteenth centu...
John Scarisbrick pursued a distinguished academic career and was appointed Professor of History at t...
The article describes the religious situation in the 19th-century England with special emphasis on t...
This dissertation provides an analysis of the attempts by John Henry Newman to account for the histo...
The history of doctrine has been shaped by its historiographers. Prominent among nineteenth-century ...
This dissertation is a dual case study of two institutions, St. John’s College, Oxford and the Merch...
Christendom, understood as that complex relationship between Christianity and culture, Church and S...
The article concerns the idea of University in the thought of John Henry Newman In particular the re...
Article commemorates the centennial of the hymn of 'Kindly Light', written by John Henry Newman. Div...
© 2015 Michael Philip FrancisThis thesis examines the foundation of Newman College within the Univer...
During the 1860\u27s Henry Edward Manning, who had recently converted to Roman Catholicism, advanced...
Volume XXXII (Supplement) of The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman, published in October 2008...
John Cumming (1807-1881) was the popular minister of the Crown Court Church of Scotland in London\u2...
This article retraces the infamous controversies between the Edinburgh Review and Oxford in the earl...