Maurice, Frederick Denison (18051872)

Maurice, Frederick Denison, a liberal theologian and social reformer, born at Normanstone, near Lowestoft, the son of a Unitarian minister; started as a literary man, and for a time edited the Athenæum, and took orders in the English Church in 1834; was chaplain to Guy's Hospital and afterwards to Lincoln's Inn, and incumbent of Vere Street Chapel; held professorships in Literature, in Theology, and Moral Philosophy; was a disciple of Coleridge and a Broad Churchman, who “promoted the charities of his faith, and parried its discussion”; one of the originators of Christian Socialism along with Kingsley, and the founder of the Working-Man's College; his writings were numerous though somewhat vague in their teachings, and had many admirers (18051872).

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Maurepas * Maurice of Nassau
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Matthew, Gospel according to
Matthias Corvinus
Maturin, Charles Robert
Maudsley, Henry
Maunday-Thursday
Maupassant, Guy de
Maupeou
Maupertuis, Pierre Louis Moreau de
Maur, St.
Maurepas
Maurice, Frederick Denison
Maurice of Nassau
Maurists
Mauritania
Mauritius
Maury, Abbé
Maury, Matthew Fontaine
Mausole`um
Mausolus
Max Müller, Friedrich
Maxim, Hiram S.