NONJURORS

[Lat.,=not swearing], those English and Scottish clergymen who refused to break their oath of allegiance to James II and take the oath to William III after the Glorious Revolution of 1688. They upheld the principles of hereditary succession and the divine right of kings, and their refusal to recognize William as king led to their removal from office. In England, the original nonjurors included William Sancroft, archbishop of Canterbury, some bishops, and about 400 other members of the clergy; their ranks were later augmented by those who refused (1714) to take the oath of allegiance to George I. In Scotland, most of the Episcopal clergy became nonjurors when their church was disestablished (1690) in favor of Presbyterianism. Many nonjurors were active in the rising of the Jacobites in 1715, despite their doctrine of nonresistance to established authority. Later their numbers dwindled, however, and their attention turned to theology. Their high standard of thought was notable and influential in its day. The Bangorian Controversy, in which nonjuror William Law was prominent, precipitated the prorogation of the convocation of the Church of England in 1717. The exiled Stuart pretenders continued to appoint nonjuring bishops, including Jeremy Collier, preserving the nonjuring episcopal succession until 1805.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Nonjurors
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books on: Nonjurors  - 185 results

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The Nonjurors were Anglican bishops, priests, and...bishops and only a scattered flock, the Nonjurors sought to regularize their position by...monarch who had intimated interest in the Nonjurors plan for contact with the Orthodox Church...
...represent the approximate number of nonjurors in the county at this time, because...Test Acts imposed double taxes on nonjurors. PA , ser. 3, 13:3-111...support for continued exclusion of nonjurors from the political community, estimated...
...Locke and the super-religiosity of the nonjurors. 1 Jonathan Swift once remarked that...Trevelvan hinted as much. So did the nonjurors. Was it so? Let us look at the situation...1 The nonjurors were those who refused to take the new...
...religious individualism that might otherwise have won the day. 5 The Nonjurors and William Law W. JARDINE GRISBROOKE ON THE NONJURORS The existing works on the Nonjurors are all outdated by recent research; until the results of the latter...
...and had extensive contact with the English Nonjurors while there. 26 English Nonjurors had more leisure and freedom to pursue scholarship...for the authority of the early Church, the Nonjurors in England formulated high theologies of the...
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journal articles on: Nonjurors  - 22 results

       More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-22 >>  
 
...devotional practice. THE NONJUROR VISION OF PRIMITIVE...Christianity was the nonjurors. Several decades ago...between Wesley and the nonjurors, although their impact...chose reveal that these Nonjurors were simply part of...Deacon, an Essentialist nonjuror. In the same month...
...November 1784 by Scotch nonjuror bishops. These were...and for the Scotch nonjurors, who were proscribed...acknowledging them, Scottish nonjurors were little known in...had England recognized nonjuror bishops it would have...established church, and the nonjurors were an irregular body...
...study to permit comparisons of jurors and nonjurors. Hereafter, the term "prospective...seated on an empanelled jury, whereas "nonjurors" refers to those who were not. Fifty...None of the partial correlations for nonjurors even approached statistical significance...
...percentage among African-American nonjurors was a mere 43 percent. Compare...case but so did 70 percent of nonjurors. In the civil defendant scenario...differences between jurors and nonjurors were strongest on the civil...1 ) , we view the juror/nonjuror differences among minority...
...not telling the truth, feigning illness, and talking to nonjurors about the case during the trial. 241...federal judges, reported misconduct by jurors who talked to nonjurors. (p<.05). There was, however, no statistically significant...
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magazine articles on: Nonjurors  - 2 results

 
 
...back to the Czech Reformation. The Moravians had taken on an identity that challenged society and government. They were nonjurors, refusing to participate in the larger societys forms of government; and many of them were pacifists and, as such, had...
...have felt he was past the age for accommodation. With the accession of William and Mary he joined the group of so-called "nonjurors" who refused to take an oath of allegiance to the new sovereigns, considering themselves still bound by their earlier oaths...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Nonjurors  - 6 results

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...In England, the original nonjurors included William Sancroft...the Episcopal clergy became nonjurors when their church was disestablished...of Presbyterianism. Many nonjurors were active in the rising...Bangorian Controversy , in which nonjuror William Law was prominent...
...LAW, WILLIAM 1686 1761, English clergyman, noted for his controversial, devotional, and mystical writings. One of the nonjurors , Law was deprived of his fellowship in Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and lost all chances for advancement in the church...
COLLIER, JEREMY 1650 1726, English clergyman. Collier was imprisoned as one of the nonjurors , who refused to pledge allegiance to William III and Mary II. He later was outlawed (1696) for absolving on the scaffold two...
...Latin form ( Jacobus ) of the name James. Theoretical justification for the Stuart claim was found in the writings of the nonjurors , who maintained the principles of hereditary succession and the divine right of kings. But the Stuarts continued adherence...
...however, including Sancroft, refused to swear allegiance to William and Mary and therefore lost their positions (see nonjurors ). The Eighteenth Century In the 18th cent. latitudinarians held control in the church; dogma, liturgy, and ecclesiastical...
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