Charles Edward Kennaway (3 January 1800 – 3 November 1875) was a British Anglican clergyman, writer and poet.
He was the second son of Sir John Kennaway, 1st Baronet. He was educated at Harrow School and graduated from St John's College, Cambridge. He married firstly Emma, daughter of Gerard Thomas Noel, and secondly Olivia, daughter of Lewis Way. [1] He served as Vicar of Chipping Campden 1832–1872 and Canon of Gloucester Cathedral. [1]
Nicholas Patrick Stephen Wiseman was an English Catholic prelate who served as the first Archbishop of Westminster upon the re-establishment of the Catholic hierarchy in England and Wales in 1850. He was made a cardinal in 1850.
James Prince Lee was an English clergyman and schoolmaster who became head master of King Edward's School, Birmingham, and was later the first Bishop of Manchester.
Thomas Morton was an English churchman, bishop of several dioceses. Well-connected and in favour with James I, he was also a significant polemical writer against Roman Catholic views. He rose to become Bishop of Durham, but despite a record of sympathetic treatment of Puritans as a diocesan, and underlying Calvinist beliefs shown in the Gagg controversy, his royalism saw him descend into poverty under the Commonwealth.
The Hulsean Lectures were established from an endowment made by John Hulse to the University of Cambridge in 1790. At present, they consist of a series of four to eight lectures given by a university graduate on some branch of Christian theology.
Henry Raikes (1782–1854) was an English cleric, chancellor of the diocese of Chester from 1830 to 1854.
James Pilkington (1520–1576), was the first Protestant Bishop of Durham from 1561 until his death in 1576. He founded Rivington Grammar School and was an Elizabethan author and orator.
George Day was the Bishop of Chichester.
Charles Webb Le Bas was an English clergyman, fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge and principal of the East India Company College.
George Whitaker was an English-Canadian clergyman and educator.
William Josiah Irons (1812–1883) was a priest in the Church of England and a theological writer.
Henry Cotterill was an Anglican bishop serving in South Africa in the second half of the 19th century. From 1872 until death he was a bishop of the Scottish Episcopal Church in Edinburgh.
Thomas Lancaster was an English Protestant clergyman, Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh from 1568.
Clement Moore Butler (1810–1890) was an Episcopal priest, author, and seminary professor who served as Chaplain of the Senate from 1850 to 1853.
The Warburton Lectures are a series of theology lectures held in Lincoln's Inn, London. They were established in 1768 with money given by William Warburton, and were intended to bring young divines to the notice of London audiences. The set topic was the proof of Christianity through prophecies.
Arthur Philip Perceval (1799–1853) was an English high church Anglican cleric, royal chaplain and theological writer.
Alexander John Scott (1805–1866) was a Scottish dissident theologian, who became the first principal of Owens College in Manchester.
Robert Wilson Evans was an English cleric and author, Archdeacon of Westmorland from 1856 until the year before his death a decade later.
Charles Smith Bird (1795–1862) was an English academic, cleric and tutor, known as a theological author and writer of devotional verse, and described as a High Church Evangelical. He was the author of several significant books against Tractarianism.
John Leifchild (1780–1862) was an English Congregational minister and writer.