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The Vision of Rome in Late Renaissance France.(Book Review)
The Modern Language Review
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July 1, 2002|
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COPYRIGHT 2002 Modern Humanities Research Association. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.
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The Vision of Rome in Late Renaissance France. By MARGARET MCGOWAN. Newhaven and London: Yale University Press. 2000. xiv + 461 pp. $50.
This book is a joy to read. The text is fascinating, but it is also interspersed with innumerable black-and-white reproductions of architectural and other engravings, medals, portraits, statues and triumphs, with a further section of sixteen pages of full-colour illustrations of manuscripts, frescoes, and paintings, together with an emblematic painted window and the Grand camee de France. This study of the perception of Rome, both as ...
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Pusey as consistent and wise: Some comparisons with Newman*
Magazine article from: Anglican and Episcopal History
; To describe Edward Bouverie Pusey in the words of my title is a verdict...would have prepared to endorse during Pusey's own lifetime and perhaps still...Movement and its immediate aftermath it is Pusey's reputation that has suffered the...
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Some American Bishops' Letters to E. B. Pusey
Magazine article from: Anglican and Episcopal History
; ...major leader of the movement, Edward Bouverie Pusey. However, in fall 1998 I had...priest-librarian and archivist of Pusey House, Oxford, where I was able...of the principal and chapter of Pusey House. George Washington Doane...
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Catholic Converts: British and American Intellectuals Turn to Rome
Magazine article from: Anglican Theological Review
; ...Oxford Movement and its converts to Rome. Edward Bouverie Pusey is wrongly called "Nathan Pusey" twice, in a case of mistaken identity...former president of Harvard University (Edward Bouverie Pusey is not in fact mentioned once correctly...
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Removing the veil: Newman as a literary artist
Magazine article from: Renascence
; ...casts up more often than we like to admit, Edward Bouverie Pusey was visiting Hursley at the same time. Pusey was, of course, the third member of the triumvirate-Keble, Newman, Pusey-that had guided Tractarianism through...
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Cash appeal to help renovate 'slum' mission.
Newspaper article from: Yorkshire Evening Post (Leeds, England)
; ...St Saviour's was funded by Dr Edward Bouverie Pusey, an Oxford professor, who was...church was built as a memorial to Pusey's wife and daughter who both...be planted as a slum mission. "Pusey paid for everything and that amounted...
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John Richardson Illingworth and Reason's Romance: The Idealist Apology in Late-Victorian England
Magazine article from: Anglican and Episcopal History
; ...the thirties by John Henry Newman, John Keble, Edward Bouverie Pusey, and a host of dons and country parsons who unabashedly...in 1889) and spiritually effective by men like Edward Bouverie Pusey, Gore, and Illingworth himself. His philosophical...
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Newman's Tractarian Homiletics
Magazine article from: Anglican Theological Review
; ...preacher John Keble (1792-1864), Edward Bouverie Pusey (1800-1882), Regius Professor...also instructive to recall that Pusey's preaching made the Cross as...for parallels, to recall that Pusey himself recognized the Tractarian...
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Jane took the plunge; Nude scene: Jane Asher (above) disrobed in the film Deep End. Inset: The poster for the film.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England)
; ...also known as the Puseyites after its co-founder, Edward Bouverie Pusey, Regius Professor of Hebrew at Christ Church, Oxford...England back to its ritualistic pre- Reformation state. Pusey and, later, Cardinal Newman emphasised the idea that...
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Anniversaries
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London
; ...pianist, composer and writer, 1847; Sir Edward Marshall Hall, criminal law advocate, 1858...Grace Aguilar, novelist and historian, 1847; Edward Bouverie Pusey, theologian, 1882; Edward Whymper, wood engraver and climber, 1911...
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Glorious Battle: The Cultural Politics of Victorian Anglo-Catholicism.
Magazine article from: National Review
; ...in Trollopean terms: There was a brief, intense flurry at Oxford, led by John Henry Newman, John Keble, and Edward Bouverie Pusey; Newman and some of his followers went so high, in the shocking image used in Barchester Towers, that "they...
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