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Die Briefe und Tagebücher von John Henry Newman: Band XXXII: Beilage von Franci

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ISBN-13
9780199532704
Book Title
The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman
ISBN
9780199532704
Publication Name
Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman Vol. Xxxii : Volume Xxxii: Supplement
Item Length
9.5in
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Series
Newman Letters and Diaries
Publication Year
2009
Type
Textbook
Format
Book, Other
Language
English
Item Height
1.7in
Author
Francis J. Mcgrath
Item Width
6.4in
Item Weight
0 Oz
Number of Pages
748 Pages

Über dieses Produkt

Product Information

John Henry Newman (1801-90) was brought up in the Church of England in the Evangelical tradition. An Oxford graduate and Fellow of Oriel College, he was appointed Vicar of St Mary's Oxford in 1828; from 1839 onwards he began to have doubts about the claims of the Anglican Church and in 1845 he was received into the Roman Catholic Church. He was made a Cardinal in 1879. His influence on both the restoration of Roman Catholicism in England and the advance of Catholic ideas in the Church of England was profound. This volume covers a crucially important and significant period in Newman's life. The Church of England bishops' continuing condemnation of Tract 90 - plus Pusey's two-year suspension for preaching a university sermon on the Real Presence - are major factors in Newman resigning as Vicar of St Mary's, Oxford. His doubts about the Church of England are deeper and stronger than ever, and he is moving closer to Rome. William Lockhart's sudden defection to Rome in August 1843 precipitates his resignation. He preaches his final Anglican sermon, 'The Parting of Friends', and retires into lay communion at Littlemore. The first edition of University Sermons , including the celebrated sermon on theological development, virtually sells out within a fortnight.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10
0199532702
ISBN-13
9780199532704
eBay Product ID (ePID)
64064465

Product Key Features

Author
Francis J. Mcgrath
Publication Name
Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman Vol. Xxxii : Volume Xxxii: Supplement
Format
Book, Other
Language
English
Series
Newman Letters and Diaries
Publication Year
2009
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
748 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9.5in
Item Height
1.7in
Item Width
6.4in
Item Weight
0 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
Bx4705.N5a4 2008
Edition Description
Supplement
Reviews
"This will complete a magnificient series which in its extent and scholarship will stand comparison with any edition of the correspondence of any other great English writer... Every letter that Newman produced is beautifully written, even if it is only a thank you note for a brace of pheasants, or a warning to a correspondent to beaware of the damp sheets in a friend's house." -- Anthony Kenny, Times Literary Supplement "This volume is as indispensable as its predecessors for all serious scholars of Newman and the contemporaries with whom he engaged. It will also be of interest and delight to the wider circle of his admirers." -- Pluscardens Benedictines "In common with the earlier volumes he has edited Francis McGrath has researched names, places, books, and allusions with exemplary detail ... Editor and publisher are again to be congratulated on the extraordinarily high standard achieved. When next year (2010) volume 33 is published, containing the general index to the whole of the Letters and Diaries, this great project will have been brought to a triumphant and fitting conclusion." -- Geoffrey Rowell, Journal of Theological Studies, 'Review from previous edition It is a massive, superbly edited collection, one that impressively reveals the range and continuity of Newman's correspondence.'Thought, 'Review from previous edition It is a massive, superbly edited collection,one that impressively reveals the range and continuity of Newman'scorrespondence.'Thought, In common with the earlier volumes he has edited Francis McGrath has researched names, places, books, and allusions with exemplary detail ... Editor and publisher are again to be congratulated on the extraordinarily high standard achieved. When next year (2010) volume 33 is published, containing the general index to the whole of the Letters and Diaries, this great project will have been brought to a triumphant and fitting conclusion., This will complete a magnificient series which in its extent and scholarship will stand comparison with any edition of the correspondence of any other great English writer... Every letter that Newman produced is beautifully written, even if it is only a thank you note for a brace of pheasants, or a warning to a correspondent to beaware of the damp sheets in a friend's house., 'The Letters themselves will never be superseded as biography and portrait. It is wonderful to live with Newman day by day and almost hour by hour. The character there revealed is so consistent, the words so inevitable, the narrative so vivid, there is no greyness as of printed pages buteverywhere life and colour.'The Heythrop Journal, This volume is as indispensable as its predecessors for all serious scholars of Newman and the contemporaries with whom he engaged. It will also be of interest and delight to the wider circle of his admirers., "This will complete a magnificient series which in its extent and scholarship will stand comparison with any edition of the correspondence of any other great English writer... Every letter that Newman produced is beautifully written, even if it is only a thank you note for a brace of pheasants, or a warning to a correspondent to beaware of the damp sheets in a friend's house." -- Anthony Kenny, Times Literary Supplement"This volume is as indispensable as its predecessors for all serious scholars of Newman and the contemporaries with whom he engaged. It will also be of interest and delight to the wider circle of his admirers." -- Pluscardens Benedictines"In common with the earlier volumes he has edited Francis McGrath has researched names, places, books, and allusions with exemplary detail ... Editor and publisher are again to be congratulated on the extraordinarily high standard achieved. When next year (2010) volume 33 is published, containing the general index to the whole of the Letters and Diaries, this great project will have been brought to a triumphant and fitting conclusion." -- Geoffrey Rowell, Journal of Theological Studies, 'Review from previous edition It is a massive, superbly edited collection, one that impressively reveals the range and continuity of Newman's correspondence.'Thought'The Letters themselves will never be superseded as biography and portrait. It is wonderful to live with Newman day by day and almost hour by hour. The character there revealed is so consistent, the words so inevitable, the narrative so vivid, there is no greyness as of printed pages but everywhere life and colour.'The Heythrop Journal, 'The Letters themselves will never be superseded as biography andportrait. It is wonderful to live with Newman day by day and almost hour byhour. The character there revealed is so consistent, the words so inevitable,the narrative so vivid, there is no greyness as of printed pages but everywherelife and colour.'The Heythrop Journal, UNEDITED UK REVIEW: "Review from previous editionIt is a massive, superbly edited collection, one that impressively reveals the range and continuity of Newman's correspondence."--Thought UNEDITED UK REVIEW: "The Letters themselves will never be superseded as biography and portrait. It is wonderful to live with Newman day by day and almost hour by hour. The character there revealed is so consistent, the words so inevitable, the narrative so vivid, there is no greyness as of printed pages but everywhere life and colour."--The Heythrop Journal "A ready criterion to bring to these recently discovered letters is to ask, 'So what's new?'. . . We learn a few things. . . but we gain much more from the exhaustive scholarship of Francis McGrath, whose footnotes to the letters and whose 150 pages of appendices make this concluding volume to the entire series a bookshelf treasure trove." --The Thomist, UNEDITED UK REVIEW: "Review from previous edition It is a massive, superbly edited collection, one that impressively reveals the range and continuity of Newman's correspondence."--Thought UNEDITED UK REVIEW: "The Letters themselves will never be superseded as biography and portrait. It is wonderful to live with Newman day by day and almost hour by hour. The character there revealed is so consistent, the words so inevitable, the narrative so vivid, there is no greyness as of printed pages but everywhere life and colour."--The Heythrop Journal "A ready criterion to bring to these recently discovered letters is to ask, 'So what's new?'. . . We learn a few things. . . but we gain much more from the exhaustive scholarship of Francis McGrath, whose footnotes to the letters and whose 150 pages of appendices make this concluding volume to the entire series a bookshelf treasure trove." --The Thomist
Table of Content
Introductory NoteTHE LETTERS OF JOHN HENRY NEWMANAppendix 1. Personal reminiscences of Canon Frederick Oakeley about: (1) John Henry Newman's final months as an Anglican at Littlemore; (2) his conversion to Roman Catholicism on the night of 9 October 1845; and (3) his subsequent movements following that conversionAppendix 2. Editorial appraisal of the verdict handed down by the jury against Newman in the Achilli trial, as published in the London Times on Saturday 26 June 1852Appendix 3. Dublin Review article on the initial publication of the Apologia pro Vit' Su', July 1864Appendix 4. . Dublin Review article on the initial publication of the 1868 edition of Parochial and Plain Sermons, April 1869Appendix 5. Dublin Review article on the initial publication of An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent, April 1871Appendix 6. Personal reminiscences of Canon Charles Wellington Furse about John Henry NewmanAppendix 7. Two reports from The Times Weekly Edition, both of which were published on Friday 16 May 1879, on: (1) the secret Consistory attended by Newman in the presence of Pope Leo XIII on the morning of Monday 12 May 1879; and (2) Newman's visit to the English College later that morningAppendix 8. Dublin Review article on the recently published sixth volume of the Lives of the Cardinals by Patrick Justin O'Byrne, July 1879Appendix 9. Contemporary newspaper articles on the death of John Henry Cardinal Newman which occurred at the Birmingham Oratory on the evening of Monday 11 August 1890Appendix 10. 'Sermon preached at the funeral of His Eminence John Henry Newman Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church by William Clifford Bishop of Clifton', Tuesday 19 August 1890Appendix 11. Local newspaper account of: (1) the funeral service of Cardinal Newman at the Parish Church of the Immaculate Conception, Birmingham Oratory, Hagley Road, Edgbaston; (2) of the funeral cortège to Rednal; and (3) of his interment as reported in The Birmingham Daily Post the day following these events, Wednesday 20 August 1890Appendix 12. . The Anne Mozley account of: (1) the Dirge service at the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Hagley Road, Edgbaston, the evening before Newman's funeral; (2) the funeral itself the following day; and (3) the interment at Rednal, Introductory NoteTHE LETTERS OF JOHN HENRY NEWMANAppendix 1: Personal reminiscences of Canon Frederick Oakeley about: (1) John Henry Newman's final months as an Anglican at Littlemore; (2) his conversion to Roman Catholicism on the night of 9 October 1845; and (3) his subsequent movements following that conversionAppendix 2: Editorial appraisal of the verdict handed down by the jury against Newman in the Achilli trial, as published in the London Times on Saturday 26 June 1852Appendix 3: Dublin Review article on the initial publication of the Apologia pro Vit' Su', July 1864Appendix 4: . Dublin Review article on the initial publication of the 1868 edition of Parochial and Plain Sermons, April 1869Appendix 5: Dublin Review article on the initial publication of An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent, April 1871Appendix 6: Personal reminiscences of Canon Charles Wellington Furse about John Henry NewmanAppendix 7: Two reports from The Times Weekly Edition, both of which were published on Friday 16 May 1879, on: (1) the secret Consistory attended by Newman in the presence of Pope Leo XIII on the morning of Monday 12 May 1879; and (2) Newman's visit to the English College later that morningAppendix 8: Dublin Review article on the recently published sixth volume of the Lives of the Cardinals by Patrick Justin O'Byrne, July 1879Appendix 9: Contemporary newspaper articles on the death of John Henry Cardinal Newman which occurred at the Birmingham Oratory on the evening of Monday 11 August 1890Appendix 10: 'Sermon preached at the funeral of His Eminence John Henry Newman Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church by William Clifford Bishop of Clifton', Tuesday 19 August 1890Appendix 11: Local newspaper account of: (1) the funeral service of Cardinal Newman at the Parish Church of the Immaculate Conception, Birmingham Oratory, Hagley Road, Edgbaston; (2) of the funeral cortège to Rednal; and (3) of his interment as reported in The Birmingham Daily Post the day following these events, Wednesday 20 August 1890Appendix 12: . The Anne Mozley account of: (1) the Dirge service at the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Hagley Road, Edgbaston, the evening before Newman's funeral; (2) the funeral itself the following day; and (3) the interment at Rednal
Copyright Date
2008
Topic
Christianity / History, Christianity / Catholic, Letters, Religious, Clergy, European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh
Lccn
61-065738
Dewey Decimal
282.092
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Dewey Edition
22
Illustrated
Yes
Genre
Biography & Autobiography, Religion, Literary Collections

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