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Difference between revisions of "William Penn"

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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_54985" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_54985" /> ==
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== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_77913" /> ==
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_77913" /> ==
<p> [[Founder]] of Pennsylvania, the son of an admiral, born in London; was converted to Quakerism while a student at Oxford, and for a fanatical attack on certain fellow-students expelled the University; his father sent him to travel in France, and afterwards placed him in charge of his Irish estates; his religious views occasioned several disputes with his father, and ultimately brought him into conflict with the Government; he spent several periods of imprisonment writing books in defence of religious liberty, among them "The [[Great]] Cause of [[Liberty]] of Conscience"; then travelled in [[Holland]] and [[Germany]] propagating his views; his father's death brought him a fortune and a claim upon the crown which he commuted for a grant of land in North America, where he founded the colony of Pennsylvania—the prefix Penn, by command of [[Charles]] II. in honour of the admiral; here he established a refuge for all persecuted religionists, and laying out [[Philadelphia]] as the capital, governed his colony wisely and generously for two years; he returned to England, where his friendship with James II. brought many advantages to the Quakers, but laid him under harassing and undeserved prosecutions for treason in the succeeding reign; a second visit to his colony (1699-1701) gave it much useful legislation; on his return his agent practically ruined him, and he was a prisoner in the [[Fleet]] in 1708; the closing years of his life were clouded by mental decay (1644-1718). </p>
<p> [[Founder]] of Pennsylvania, the son of an admiral, born in London; was converted to Quakerism while a student at Oxford, and for a fanatical attack on certain fellow-students expelled the University; his father sent him to travel in France, and afterwards placed him in charge of his Irish estates; his religious views occasioned several disputes with his father, and ultimately brought him into conflict with the Government; he spent several periods of imprisonment writing books in defence of religious liberty, among them "The Great Cause of Liberty of Conscience"; then travelled in Holland and [[Germany]] propagating his views; his father's death brought him a fortune and a claim upon the crown which he commuted for a grant of land in North America, where he founded the colony of Pennsylvania—the prefix Penn, by command of Charles II. in honour of the admiral; here he established a refuge for all persecuted religionists, and laying out [[Philadelphia]] as the capital, governed his colony wisely and generously for two years; he returned to England, where his friendship with James II. brought many advantages to the Quakers, but laid him under harassing and undeserved prosecutions for treason in the succeeding reign; a second visit to his colony (1699-1701) gave it much useful legislation; on his return his agent practically ruined him, and he was a prisoner in the [[Fleet]] in 1708; the closing years of his life were clouded by mental decay (1644-1718). </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==