The Priesthoods and Apostasies of Pierce Connelly
Title | The Priesthoods and Apostasies of Pierce Connelly PDF eBook |
Author | Denis G. Paz |
Publisher | Edwin Mellen Press |
Pages | 514 |
Release | 1986 |
Genre | Religion |
ISBN |
A biography of Pierce Connelly (1804-1883), whose life illustrated various 19th-century themes of what the author calls Anglo-American religious warfare, most notably the role played by several apostate priests, but primarily Connelly, in Victorian spiritual warfare.
Catholics of Consequence
Title | Catholics of Consequence PDF eBook |
Author | Ciaran O'Neill |
Publisher | OUP Oxford |
Pages | 273 |
Release | 2014-06-13 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0191017469 |
For as far back as school registers can take us, the most prestigious education available to any Irish child was to be found outside Ireland. Catholics of Consequence traces, for the first time, the transnational education, careers, and lives of more than two thousand Irish boys and girls who attended Catholic schools in England, France, Belgium, and elsewhere in the second half of the nineteenth century. There was a long tradition of Irish Anglicans, Protestants, and Catholics sending their children abroad for the majority of their formative years. However, as the cultural nationalism of the Irish revival took root at the end of the nineteenth century, Irish Catholics who sent their children to school in Britain were accused of a pro-Britishness that crystallized into still recognisable terms of insult such as West Briton, Castle Catholic, Squireen, and Seoinin. This concept has an enduring resonance in Ireland, but very few publications have ever interrogated it. Catholics of Consequence endeavours to analyse the education and subsequent lives of the Irish children that received this type of transnational education. It also tells the story of elite education in Ireland, where schools such as Clongowes Wood College and Castleknock College were rooted in the continental Catholic tradition, but also looked to public schools in England as exemplars. Taken together the book tells the story of an Irish Catholic elite at once integrated and segregated within what was then the most powerful state in the world.
First Chaplain of the Confederacy
Title | First Chaplain of the Confederacy PDF eBook |
Author | Katherine Bentley Jeffrey |
Publisher | LSU Press |
Pages | 182 |
Release | 2020-10-14 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0807174009 |
Darius Hubert (1823‒1893), a French-born Jesuit, made his home in Louisiana in the 1840s and served churches and schools in Grand Coteau, Baton Rouge, and New Orleans. In 1861, he pronounced a blessing at the Louisiana Secession Convention and became the first chaplain of any denomination appointed to Confederate service. Hubert served with the First Louisiana Infantry in Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia for the entirety of the war, afterward returning to New Orleans, where he continued his ministry among veterans as a trusted pastor and comrade. One of just three full-time Catholic chaplains in Lee’s army, only Hubert returned permanently to the South after surrender. In postwar New Orleans, he was unanimously elected chaplain of the veterans of the eastern campaign and became well-known for his eloquent public prayers at memorial events, funerals of prominent figures such as Jefferson Davis, and dedications of Confederate monuments. In this first-ever biography of Hubert, Katherine Bentley Jeffrey offers a far-reaching account of his extraordinary life. Born in revolutionary France, Hubert entered the Society of Jesus as a young man and left his homeland with fellow Jesuits to join the New Orleans mission. In antebellum Louisiana, he interacted with slaves and free people of color, felt the effects of anti-Catholic and anti-Jesuit propaganda, experienced disputes and dysfunction with the trustees of his Baton Rouge church, and survived a near-fatal encounter with Know-Nothing vigilantism. As a chaplain with the Army of Northern Virginia, Hubert witnessed harrowing battles and their equally traumatic aftermath in surgeons’ tents and hospitals. After the war, he was a spiritual director, friend, mentor, and intermediary in the fractious and politically divided Crescent City, where he both honored Confederate memory and promoted reconciliation and social harmony. Hubert’s complicated and tumultuous life is notable both for its connection to the most compelling events of the era and its illumination of the complex and unexpected ways religion intersected with politics, war, and war’s repercussions.
The priesthoods and apostasies of Pierce Connelly
Title | The priesthoods and apostasies of Pierce Connelly PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 422 |
Release | 1986 |
Genre | |
ISBN | 9780889469921 |
A Nation of Beggars?
Title | A Nation of Beggars? PDF eBook |
Author | Donal A. Kerr |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Pages | 390 |
Release | 1994 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780198207375 |
Professor Kerr's scholarly and incisive analysis charts the souring of relations between Church and State and the destruction of Lord John Russell's dream of bringing a golden age to Ireland.
Victorian Cosmopolitanism and English Catholicity in the Mid-Century Novel
Title | Victorian Cosmopolitanism and English Catholicity in the Mid-Century Novel PDF eBook |
Author | Teresa Huffman Traver |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 140 |
Release | 2019-11-20 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3030313476 |
Victorian Cosmopolitanism and English Catholicity in the Mid-Century Novel argues that the Creedal doctrines of “the communion of saints” and the “holy Catholic Church” provided Victorian novelists—both Roman Catholic and Protestant—with a means of exploring religious forms of cosmopolitanism. Building on research exploring the divisions between Roman Catholicism and Protestantism in Victorian literature and culture, Teresa Huffman Traver considers the extent to which anti-Catholicism, domesticity, and national identity were linked. Huffman Traver connects this research with cosmopolitan theory, and analyzes how the conception of Catholicity could be used to reach beyond national identity towards a transnational community. Investigating the idea of a “rooted” cosmopolitanism, grounded in the local and limited in scope, this Pivot book offers a new angle on how religion, domesticity, and national identity were constructed in nineteenth-century British culture.
Memory and Myth
Title | Memory and Myth PDF eBook |
Author | David B. Sachsman |
Publisher | Purdue University Press |
Pages | 326 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9781557534392 |
"Ain't nobody clean" : Glory! and the politics of black agency / W. Scott Poole -- Alex Haley's Roots : the fiction of fact / William E. Huntzicker -- A voice of the south : the transformation of Shelby Foote / David W. Bulla.