one source date February 2012 no footnotes date February 2012 wikt dissent dissenter Or see dissent . The term dissenter from the Latin dissentire , to disagree , labels one who disagrees in matters of opinion, belief, etc. In the social and religious history of England and Wales , however, it refers particularly to a member of a religious body who has, for one reason or another, separated from the Established Church . ref name OxDictChristChurch citation title The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church editor1 first FL editor1 last Cross editor2 first EA editor2 last Livingstone publisher Oxford University Press place USA edition 3rd page 490 date March 13, 1997 . ref Originally, the term included English and Welsh Roman Catholicism Roman Catholics ref name OxDictChristChurch whom the original draft of the Nonconformist Relief Act 1779 styled Protesting Catholic Dissenters. In practice, however, it designates Protestantism Protestant Dissenters referred to in sec. ii. of the Act of Toleration 1689 Act of Toleration of 1689 see English Dissenters . The term does not apply to those bodies who dissent from the Established Church of Scotland and in speaking of members of religious bodies which have seceded from established churches outside Britain one usually employs the term dissident s from the Latin dissidere , to dissent . In this connotation the terms dissenter and dissenting, which had acquired a somewhat contemptuous flavour, have tended since the middle of the 18th century to be replaced by nonconformist , a term which did not originally imply secession, but only refusal to conform in certain particulars for example the wearing of the surplice with the authorized usages of the Established Church. ref name OxDictChristChurch Still more recently the term nonconformist has in its turn, as the political attack on the principle of a state establishment of religion developed ... Christian radicalism de Dissenter es Dissenters no Dissenter pl Dysydenci ru sv Dissenter ... more details
File Konung Carl XV, Svenskt portr ttgalleri.jpg thumb 190px right Charles XV of Sweden Karl XV before his death in 1872. File Oscar II, Svensk portr ttgalleri.jpg thumb 190px right Oscar II of Sweden Oscar II in a pre 1900 photograph. Dissenter Acts were laws, enacted by the Monarchy of Sweden King of Sweden with the consent of the Parliament of Sweden Swedish Parliament , which gave nonconformism nonconformist s who wanted to leave the then established Church of Sweden the right to do so, provided that the dissenter s then joined one of the state approved denominations. The first such edict was decreed in 1860 by Charles XV of Sweden Karl XV and the Riksdag of the Estates St ndsriksdag the second one in 1873 by Oscar II of Sweden Oscar II and the reorganized bicameral History of the Riksdag Riksdag . Neither the St ndsriksdag , divided into four Estates, nor the newer Riksdag could be said to be truly democratic, though, as the suffrage was restricted to males who owned property. The 1873 edict remained in force until the 1951 Religious Freedom Act religionsfrihetslag the Church of Sweden remained the established state church until 2000. Despite the enactment of the Dissenter Acts, nonconformists were still required to financially support the then established Church of Sweden The state religion is the Evangelical Lutheran doctrine, in the sense that the churches which have concurred in this creed are described as a state church, placed under the king s government s supervision, care and defence, for which the state so defines its constitution and economy that the King and his Cabinet Council determines the religion. This religion is taught in state schools and has special constitutional protection furthermore, its clergy constitute an Estate of the realm. There shall be a Board of Education to which the king will appoint church officials. Holidays of the state church shall be respected even by adherents of foreign creeds, who also must contribute to its expenses. ... more details
Henry Jacobs born 1924 is an American humorist. Henry Jacobs may also refer to Henry Eyster Jacobs born 1844, floruit fl. 1844 1911 , American religious figure and writer See also Harry Jacobs , American football player Harry Jacobs tug of war Henry Jacob , English dissenter hndis name Jacobs, Henry ... more details
Samuel Bourn may refer to Samuel Bourn 1714 1796 was an English Dissenter minister Samuel Bourn the Elder 1648 1719 , English dissenting minister Samuel Bourn the Younger 1689 1754 , English dissenting minister See also Samuel Bourne , British photographer hndis Bourn, Samuel ... more details
Thomas Brand may refer to Thomas Brand divine Thomas Brand senior c. 1717 1770 , British Member of Parliament for Gatton, New Shoreham, Okehampton and Tavistock Thomas Brand Hollis 1719 1804 , British radical and dissenter Thomas Brand junior 1749 1794 , British Member of Parliament for Arundel Thomas Brand, 20th Baron Dacre 1774 1851 , British Whig politician Thomas Brand producer , producer of Crazy People Thomas Brand footballer , member of the Greenland national football team hndis Brand, Thomas ... more details
Italic title The London Medical and Surgical Journal was a British medical journal first published as a monthly in 1828. The founding editors in chief were John Davies, John Epps , and Joseph Houlton. The editorial line was in favour of medical reform. ref Howard Brody, Zahra Meghani, Kimberly Greenwald, http books.google.co.uk books?id EbT0cAPsamIC&pg PA23 Google Books Michael Ryan s Writings on Medical Ethics 2009 , pp. 23 24. ref It also wrote from the perspective of independent medical teachers and general practitioner s in London, and represented the Dissenter interest. someone please check this, dissenter goes to a religious article In the same market as the The Lancet , it was less scurrilous and at 6 d . competed on price. ref Adrian Desmond , The Politics of Evolution Morphology, Medicine and Reform in Radical London 1989 , p. 15. ref The journal closed down shortly after its editor, Michael Ryan editor Michael Ryan , became insolvent in 1836. ref Desmond, p. 170. ref References reflist Category General medical journals Category Publications established in 1828 Category Publications disestablished in 1836 Category Monthly journals Category Defunct journals Category English language journals ... more details
The Nonconformist Relief Act 1779 19 Geo. III c. 44 was Act of Parliament Act of the Kingdom of Great Britain British Parliament . The Act allowed any English Dissenters Dissenter to preach and teach on the condition that he declared he was a Christian and a Protestant took the Oaths of Allegiance and supremacy and took the Scripture s for his rule of faith and practice. ref Dudley Julius Medley, A Student s Manual of English Constitutional History. Sixth Edition Oxford Basil Blackwell, 1925 , p. 650. ref ref Mark A. Thomson, A Constitutional History of England. 1642 to 1801 London Methuen, 1938 , p. 406. ref Notes reflist Category Christianity in the United Kingdom Category Great Britain Acts of Parliament 1779 ... more details
Robert Andrews may refer to Robert Andrews actor 1895 1976 , British actor Rob Andrews born 1957 , New Jersey politician Rob Andrews baseball born 1952 , Major League Baseball second baseman Robert Andrews translator 1723 1766 , English Dissenter, poet and translator of Virgil Robert Hardy Andrews , American screenwriter for Girls Town etc. Robert Wilson Andrews 1837 1922 , Hawaii born artist and engineer See also Bob Andrews disambiguation Robert Andrew disambiguation hndis Andrews, Robert ... more details
Thomas Hollis may refer to Thomas Hollis 1634 1718 , English cutler, merchant and philanthropist responsible for contributing funds to build the Hollis Hospital in Sheffield needs valid blue link Thomas Hollis 1659 1731 , English merchant, benefactor of Harvard College, donator of the first town bible to Holliston, Massachusetts, which was named for him Thomas Hollis 1720 1774 , English author and political philosopher, also a benefactor of Harvard College Tommy Hollis 1954 2001 , American actor who played a supporting role in the 1992 film Malcolm X Thomas Brand Hollis 1719 1804 , British political radical and dissenter See also Hollis Thomas born 1974 , American football player hndis Hollis, Thomas ... more details
A compter , sometimes referred to as a counter , was a type of small England English prison controlled by a sheriff. The inmates were usually civil prisoners, for example dissenter s and debtors. Examples of compters include London s Wood Street Counter , Poultry Compter , Giltspur Street Compter and Borough Compter and the lock up over the Abbey Gateway, Reading Abbey Gateway , next to St Laurence s church, in Reading, Berkshire this was the Compter Gate and the lock up was known as the Compter . The Compter s Commonwealth 1617 , by William Fennor , was a work written from the author s experience of imprisonment at London s Wood Street Counter Wood Street compter , and is regarded by many historians as one of the principal primary sources for assessment of English 16th century prison conditions. Category Penal imprisonment Category Penology Category Prisons in the United Kingdom Category Debtors prisons Unreferenced date December 2007 prison stub ... more details
Daniel Fisher 1731 1807 , was an English dissenting minister . Fisher was born in Cockermouth in 1731, was appointed in 1771 tutor in classics and mathematics at Homerton College , where he was afterwards divinity tutor. He was a rigid Calvinist and staunch dissenter. He died at Hackney in 1807 after a lingering illness, in which he lost the use of all his faculties. Two funeral sermons were preached on the occasion, one of which, by the Rev. Samuel Palmer, was published under the title of The General Union of Believers, London, 1807, 8vo. References reflist DNB wstitle Fisher, Daniel Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Fisher, Daniel ALTERNATIVE NAMES Squish the fish SHORT DESCRIPTION English dissenting minister DATE OF BIRTH 1731 PLACE OF BIRTH Cockermouth DATE OF DEATH 1807 PLACE OF DEATH Cockerbutt DEFAULTSORT Fisher, Daniel Category 1731 births Category 1807 deaths Category People from Cockermouth Category Fellows of Homerton College, Cambridge UK reli bio stub ... more details
of a farmer. ref Kent Kreuter and Gretchen Kreuter, An American Dissenter The Life of Algie Martin ..., An American Dissenter, pg. 4. ref From there, Simons was off to Madison, Wisconsin Madison ..., An American Dissenter, pg. 8. ref In the course of his education, Simons was exposed to socialism ... . ref name AAD4 Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pg. 15. ref He was chosen by the faculty ... Social Settlement in September 1895. ref Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pp. 17 18. ref ... of Charities there. ref Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pg. 20. ref Simons found the conditions ... of Sociology . ref Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pp. 28 29. ref In June 1897, Simons ... Dissenter, pg. 34. ref After three years living in the Settlement house Settlements , Simons ... Dissenter, pp. 41 42. ref The first issue of The Workers Call was dated March 11, 1899 and featured ... object of enmity. ref Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pg. 43. ref This A.M. Simons ... 24, 1899. Quoted in Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pg. 43. ref And thus Simons cast ... to Reason . ref name Kreuter, pg. 113 Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pg. 113. ref Appeal ... he had written. ref Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pg. 119. ref Despite his best intentions .... ref Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pg. 121. ref With little humor or light fiction from ... of the farmer in the American socialist movement. ref Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter ... the book as a socialist document. ref Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pg. 131. ref May ... Nation albeit with limited success. ref Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pg. 126 ... issue. ref name K127 Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pg. 127. ref Far more typical and worthy ... it was for the time being the best he could do. ref Kreuter and Kreuter, An American Dissenter, pp. 142 ... Dissenter, pp. 144, 148. ref The Simons played no role in the bustling political activity ... more details
Jacobite may refer to In ancient days, the term was used for the followers of faith propounded by a 6th century Bishop Jacob Baradaeus . In Modern days, the following churches are called Jacobite Church Syriac Orthodox Church Jacobite Syrian Christian Church Indian Malankara Orthodox Church Malabar Independent Syrian Church West Syrian Rite Syrian Jacobites Jacobite, a follower of Jacobitism , the political movement dedicated to the return of the Stuart kings to the thrones of England, Scotland and Ireland. Jacobite Risings , a series of uprisings, rebellions, and wars in the British Isles occurring between 1688 and 1746 Jacobite dissenter , follower of Reverend Henry Jacob 1563 1624 One of the tribes in the Book of Mormon Jacobites band , a British band featuring Nikki Sudden, Dave Kusworth and Epic Soundtracks The Jacobite steam train , a train in Scotland See also Jacob disambiguation Jacobin disambiguation Jacobean disambiguation Jacobian matrix and determinant , in vector calculus Jacobus disambiguation an Chacobita desambigaci n ca Jacobita cs Jakobit de Jakobiten Begriffskl rung es Jacobitas desambiguaci n fr Jacobite nl Jacobieten fi Jakobiitti sv Jakobit th ... more details
Henry Maurice 1634 30 July 1682 was a Welsh Church of England Anglican priest who became an Independent minister. Life Maurice was born in 1634 in the parish of Aberdaron , Wales and educated at Jesus College, Oxford . He was ordained and served after the Restoration as vicar of Bromfield, Shropshire , Shropshire and rector of Mellteyrn , Caernarfonshire . After becoming rector of Church Stretton in 1668, he had by June 1671 become a Dissenter, preaching widely in Shropshire and Wales. He has been described as one of the most virile Puritan propagators of the second generation. ref name WBO His industry and preaching led to the Independent churches in his area becoming numerically strong. He died on 30 July 1682. ref name WBO cite web url http wbo.llgc.org.uk en s MAUR HEN 1634.html title Maurice, Henry 1634 1682 , Independent minister last Richard first Thomas work Welsh Biography Online publisher National Library of Wales year 2007 accessdate 16 March 2009 ref References Reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Maurice, Henry ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1634 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 30 July 1682 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Maurice, Henry Category 1634 births Category 1682 deaths Category Welsh Anglican priests Category Welsh clergy Category Alumni of Jesus College, Oxford ... more details
The Schism Act 1714 13 Ann., c. 7 was an Act of Parliament Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom Parliament of Great Britain . The Act stipulated that anyone who wished to keep a public or private school, or act as tutor, must first be granted a licence from a bishop. Also, he must conform to the liturgy of the Church of England and to have taken in the past year the rites of that Church. The Act was aimed against English Dissenters Dissenter schools dissenting academies . By chance the Act was due to come into force on the day of Anne of Great Britain Queen Anne s death, ref Mark A. Thomson, A Constitutional History of England. 1642 to 1801 London Methuen, 1938 , p. 276. ref and upon the Hanoverian succession in 1714 and the subsequent supremacy of the Whig British political faction Whig party , the Act was repealed by the Religious Worship Act 1718 . ref Dudley Julius Medley, A Student s Manual of English Constitutional History. Sixth Edition Oxford Basil Blackwell, 1925 , p. 649. ref Notes reflist Category Christianity in the United Kingdom Category Education in the United Kingdom Category Repealed Great Britain Acts of Parliament Category Great Britain Acts of Parliament 1714 ... more details
Orphan date April 2011 I. Daniel Stewart 1933 23 June 2005 was a judge of the Utah Supreme Court from 1979 2000. Stewart served a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints in Germany. While there, in about 1956, he contracted polio which left him confined to a wheel chair for the rest of his life. Stewart earned a law degree from the University of Utah . He worked for the US government fighting trusts for a time and then became a law professor at the University of Utah . Among other decisions Stewart was the lone dissenter from the 1993 Utah Supreme Court ruling that allowed prayers before government meetings as long as there was no religious restriction on who could give the prayer. Sources http www.deseretnews.com cgi bin cqcgi plus plus.env?CQ SESSION KEY TSLBAFXZUCZF&CQ CUR DOCUMENT 18&CQ TEXT MAIN YES Deseret News , May 10, 2000 http findarticles.com p articles mi qn4188 is 20050625 ai n14698644 Deseret News , 25 June 2005, obituary for Stewart Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Stewart, I. Daniel ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION American judge DATE OF BIRTH 1933 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 2005 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Stewart, I. Daniel Category 1933 births Category American Latter Day Saints Category Mormon missionaries in Germany Category Utah state court judges Category University of Utah alumni Category University of Utah faculty Category 2005 deaths ... more details
John Ballantyne 1778 1830 , was a Scottish minister of religion. Life Ballantyne was born in the parish of Kinghorn 8 May 1778 entered the University of Edinburgh in 1795, and joined the Anti Burgher Burgher branch of the Secession Church , though his parents belonged to the establishment. He was ordained minister of a congregation at Stonehaven , Kincardineshire , in 1805. He died 5 November 1830. Works In 1824 he published A Comparison of Established and Dissenting Churches, by a Dissenter in 1830 this pamphlet was republished with additions during the voluntary church controversy of the period. Ballantyne was a partisanship in the controversy. His Examination of the Human Mind first part appeared in 1828 two further parts were intended, but never appeared. It is the work of a follower of Thomas Reid and Dugald Stewart , with some criticism of Thomas Brown philosopher Thomas Brown . References reflist Cite DNB wstitle Ballantyne, John 1778 1830 one source date January 2011 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Ballantyne, John ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1778 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1830 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Ballantyne, John Category 1778 births Category 1830 deaths Category 18th century Scottish people Category 19th century Scottish people Category Alumni of the University of Edinburgh Category Scottish Christian ministers Category Scottish religious writers Category 19th century writers Category People from Kinghorn ... more details
File John Rippon.jpg thumb John Rippon John Rippon 1751 1836 was an English Baptist minister and in 1787 published an important hymnal, A Selection of Hymns from the Best Authors, Intended to Be an Appendix to Isaac Watts Dr. Watts Psalms and Hymns , commonly known as Rippon s Selection , which was very successful, and was reprinted 27 times in over 200,000 copies. Many hymns originally published in Rippon s Selection are preserved in the Sacred Harp . At the age of 17, Rippon attended Bristol Baptist College in Bristol, England. After the death of John Gill theologian John Gill , he assumed Gill s pastorate, the Baptist meeting house in Carter Lane, Tooley Street , which moved in 1833 to the New Park Street Chapel in London, from 1773 at the age of 20 until his death, a period of 63 years. He also edited the Baptist Annual Register for 12 years. He was considered the foremost authority on the hymns of Isaac Watts . Rippon s church was later pastored by Charles Haddon Spurgeon before moving to the Metropolitan Tabernacle at Elephant and Castle in Southwark . Rippon s Selection of hymns were used by the congregation until 1866 when Spurgeon produced an update called Our Own Hymn Book which borrowed much from Rippon and Watts. Citation needed date January 2009 At the time of his death, he was working on a book commemorating those buried in London s English Dissenter Dissenter cemetery, Bunhill Fields , where he himself was buried. ref Francis, J.C. s Page Notes by the Way.djvu 71 Notes by the Way 1909 ref References reflist File Grave of John Rippon, Bunhill Fields.jpg thumb 220px Rippon s grave in Bunhill Fields , London. Bibliography Manley, Ken R. Redeeming Love Proclaim John Rippon and the Baptists Carlisle, Paternoster Press, 2004 Studies in Baptist History and Thought SBHT, 12 . Manley, Ken R., John Rippon and Baptist Hymnody, in Isabel Rivers and David L. Wykes eds , Dissenting Praise Religious Dissent and the hymn in England and Wales Oxford, Oxford University ... more details
refimprove date February 2011 Thomas Cotton 1653 1730 was a English Dissenters dissenting minister of London. Life Thomas Cotton was born at Penistone , Yorkshire, 1653. His father, William Cotton 1627 1674 , notable Iron master of Wortley Top Forge , was and English Dissenters Dissenter , noted for his great hospitality and kindness to the ejected ministers. One of these was a John Spawford, ejected from Silkstone in 1662, whom he received into his family as tutor to his son until his death in 1668. Subsequently, Cotton studied successively at Henry Hickman s academy at Stourbridge , in Westmorland Westmoreland at Richard Frankland tutor Richard Frankland s Natland Academy, and at the University of Edinburgh , where he was awarded an M.A. in 1677. ref Joshua Toulmin An historical view of the state of the Protestant Dissenters in England Bath and London, 1814. ref On leaving college, he accepted a position as chaplain to Lady Sarah Houghton, daughter of the Earl of Chesterfield, for about a year, after which ill health forced him to leave. He then conducted a small chapel at his father s house, until persecution forced him to stop. He then accepted a position as tutor and governor to a young gentleman, and spent three years touring Europe, during which he witnessed the ejection of Protestant ministers at Loudun , Poitou and Saumur , which he later described in the unpublished memoirs of his travels. ref quoted in Joshua Toulmin op. cit. ref Cotton was offered appointments in the Church of England, but chose to remain a English Dissenters Dissenter . He settled first at Hoxton Square , London 1690 95 , then Ware in Hertfordshire 1695 99 , finally at Dyot Street Chapel, St. Giles s in the Fields, Bloomsbury 1699 1727 . He died in London 11 August 1730. Family In 1689, he married Bridget Hoar, with whom he had three children Leonard 1693 1770 who emigrated to America Thomas 1710 97 , and Alicia b. 1730 . References reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . ... more details
Year nav topic 1687 literature The year 1687 in literature involved some significant events. Events A Latin edition of the works of Confucius is published in Paris, the first translation of his works into any Western language. Confucian Sinarum Philosophus is the work of Jesuit scholars and Chinese converts to Christianity. New books Ihara Saikaku Transmission of the Martial Arts Gerard Langbaine Momus Triumphans, or the Plagiaries of the English Stage Exposed Isaac Newton Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy Charles Perrault Le Si cle de Louis le Grand The Century of Louis the Great George Savile, 1st Marquess of Halifax Letter to a Dissenter New drama Aphra Behn The Emperor of the Moon Sir Charles Sedley Bellamira, or The Mistress Nahum Tate The History of King Lear adapted from Shakespeare s King Lear Lear , but with a happy ending The Island Princess adapted from John Fletcher playwright Fletcher s The Island Princess Island Princess Poetry John Dryden The Hind and the Panther Matthew Prior The Hind and the Panther Transversed to the Story of the Country and the City Mouse Births March 7 Jean Lebeuf , historian died 1760 June 24 Johann Albrecht Bengel , theologian died 1752 August 26 Henry Carey writer Henry Carey , poet and dramatist died 1743 November 7 William Stukeley , antiquary died 1765 Deaths February 16 Charles Cotton , poet and translator born 1630 March 28 Constantijn Huygens , poet born 1596 November 7 Isaac Orobio de Castro , Jewish philosopher and apologist born c.1617 December 16 William Petty , philosopher born 1623 date unknown George Dalgarno , linguist born 1626 Ren Rapin , Jesuit writer born 1621 DEFAULTSORT 1687 In Literature Category 1687 books Category Years in literature fr 1687 en litt rature mk 1687 sq 1687 n literatur ... more details
unreferenced date August 2007 Disestablishmentarianism today relates to the Church of England in the United Kingdom and related views on its establishment as an established church . It was primarily a movement in the United Kingdom in the 19th century, when all four Home nations had established churches, even though the established churches in Wales and Ireland could not count on even nominal adherence by a majority of the population of those countries. In Ireland, the predominantly Catholic population campaigned against the position of the established Anglican Church of Ireland eventually disestablished in 1869. In England there was a campaign by Liberals, dissenter s and nonconformist s to disestablish the Church of England in the late 19th century. The campaigners were called Liberationists the Liberation Society was founded by Edward Miall in 1853 . This campaign failed, but nearly all of the legal disabilities of nonconformists were gradually dismantled. The campaign for disestablishment was revived in the 20th century when Parliament rejected the 1929 revision of the Book of Common Prayer , leading to calls for separation of Church and State to prevent political interference in matters of worship. In the late 20th century, reform of the House of Lords also brought into question the position of the Lord Spiritual Lords Spiritual . The Church of England was disestablished in Wales in 1920, becoming the Church in Wales . It continues to be the established church in England. The Church of Ireland was disestablished in 1869. The Church of Scotland was disestablished in 1929 but remains the national church of Scotland. The question of the succession to the British monarchy is also affected by the Act of Settlement 1701 . See also Antidisestablishmentarianism Antiestablishmentarianism Christian anarchism Religion in the United Kingdom Secularism State Church Tithe Welsh Church Act 1914 Category Anglicanism Category Separation of church and state Category Church of En ... more details
The name Communist Party of Sweden Sveriges Kommunistiska Parti , abbreviated SKP has been used by several political parties in Sweden Left Party Sweden , known as the Communist Party of Sweden between 1921 and 1967 Communist Party of Sweden 1924 , split off by SKP leader Zeth H glund in 1924 which later merged with the social democrats in 1926 Socialist Party Sweden, 1929 , Kilbohmarna , the majority of the SKP main branch, expelled from the Communist International in 1929, dissolved in 1948, Communist League Marxist Leninists Sweden , KFML , a Maoism Maoist party called the Communist Party of Sweden between 1973 and 1987, Communist Party Sweden , Kommunistiska Partiet , an anti revisionist party still active. Communist Workers Party of Sweden , SKA , an anti Deng Xiaoping , split off from the former, formed in 1980 but dissolved in 1993, Communist Party in Sweden , KPS , a pro Albanian, dissenter group from the former, formed in 1982 but dissolved in 1993, Communist Party of Sweden 1995 , name used since 1995 by the group previously known as the Workers Party the Communists APK , the party is still alive, Communist Party of Sweden Takman , a short lived party founded by party veteran John Takman when APK was declared financially bankrupt in 1995, Communist Party of Sweden 1995 III , another group, led by Sten Gunnarsson, Jonas af Roslagen and Ingvar L v, that emerged out of APK in 1995 disambig political no Sveriges kommunistiska parti sv Sveriges kommunistiska parti ... more details
Benjamin Winchester August 6, 1817 January 25, 1901 was an early leader in the Latter Day Saint movement . Winchester was the youngest adult member of Zion s Camp , an original member of the first Seventy Mormonism Quorum of the Seventy , editor of the first independent Mormon periodical, the Gospel Reflector The Gospel Reflector , Branch president president of a large Branch Mormonism branch of the church in Philadelphia , a zealous Mormon missionary missionary who baptized thousands, a Rigdonite Apostle Mormonism Apostle , and ultimately a dissenter who repudiated Mormonism altogether. References Benjamin Winchester ed. , The Gospel Reflector , reprint of the original 1841 Philadelphia edition by Richard Drew for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Strangite , 1993. Elizabeth Proctor Kiddle et alia ed. , The Family of Auer Winchester Proctor , Provo, Utah 1978. David J. Whittaker , Early Mormon Pamphleteering , BYU Studies , 2003. http contentdm.lib.byu.edu cdm ref collection NCMP1820 1846 id 6029 The Gospel Reflector PDF scans courtesy of the L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library , Brigham Young University . Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Winchester, Benjamin ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Leader in the LDS church DATE OF BIRTH August 6, 1817 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH January 25, 1901 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Winchester, Benjamin Category 1817 births Category 1901 deaths Category 19th century Mormon missionaries Category American Latter Day Saints Category American Mormon missionaries Category Converts to Mormonism Category Editors of Latter Day Saint publications Category Leaders in the Church of Christ Latter Day Saints Category Mormon missionaries in the United States Category Leaders in various Latter Day Saint denominations Category Former Latter Day Saints LDS stub ... more details
Politics of Belgium The Liberal Appeal lang nl Liberaal App l , LA is a Flanders Flemish liberal conservatism right liberal political party . Founded on March 22, 2002 by the liberal Member of the European Parliament MEP Ward Beysen 1941 2005 as a secession of the Flemish Liberals and Democrats VLD , mostly in Antwerp . The Liberaal App l was first a movement, then became a full fledged political party on January 20, 2003. It took part, with a limited amount of votes less than 0,5 under the 5 electoral threshold, at the Belgian general election, 2003 May 2003 federal elections . On January 14, 2005, Ward Beysen committed suicide, an event that created doubts over the party s future. There were meetings in the following months between the leadership of Liberaal App l and another VLD dissenter, Hugo Coveliers , but to no effect, as Coveliers finally announced his own party VLOTT to break the cordon sanitaire around the Vlaams Belang . On November 7, 2005 the party s leader, Jacques Kerremans, met his VLD counterpart Bart Somers in view of an electoral cartel for the Belgian municipal elections, 2006 municipal elections of October 8, 2006, and the reintegration of Liberaal App l into the VLD began at the local level. On February 2, 2007 the party s leader announced that his party will participate at the open alliance of VLD VIVANT for the general election of June 2007. This is a further step to reintegration into the VLD. External links http www.guyhuybrechts.com Guy Huybrechts, Fractie leader in Zandhoven in Dutch Belgian political parties Category Belgian political parties Flanders Category Liberal parties Belgium stub nl Liberaal App l ... more details
Memoirs of Hecate County is a work of fiction by Edmund Wilson , first published in 1946 in literature 1946 , but banned in the United States until 1959, when it was reissued with minor revisions by the author. Although it is sometimes described as a novel, the only link between the six stories is the narrator. The Man Who Shot Snapping Turtles. First published in Atlantic Monthly . Ellen Terhune. First published in Partisan Review . Glimpses of Wilbur Flick. First published in Town and Country . The Princess with the Golden Hair. Novella. The Milhollands and their Damned Soul. Mr and Mrs Blackburn at Home. Censorship The book was published by Doubleday publisher Doubleday in March 1946, and about 60,000 copies were sold. In July, the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice lodged a complaint, and 130 copies were seized from four bookstores owned by Doubleday and from the New York Public Library. The ban was challenged by the publisher, but upheld by 2 1, the dissenter being Nathan D. Perlman. ref Many Shops Halt Seized Book Sale New York Times , July 10, 1946. ref ref Hecate Obscene Publisher Is Fined New York Times , November 28, 1946. ref The case went to the Supreme Court of the United States Supreme Court in 1948, where the decision was upheld 4 4 after the disqualification of Felix Frankfurter . It was no longer sold in the US, but was published in the United Kingdom by W. H. Allen in June 1951, going through six impressions in just two years. Throughout the 1950s there was intense public debate about the censorship of literary works, and in 1958 the publication of Lolita by Wilson s friend, Vladimir Nabokov Nabokov demonstrated the extent to which public attitudes had relaxed. In June 1959, Memoirs of Hecate County was republished in New York by Octagon and L. C. Page, and the revised edition appeared in the UK in March 1960, published by Panther. References references Richard Hixson. Pornography and the Justices The Supreme Court and the Intractable Obs ... more details