Hugh James Rose
Hugh James Rose | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Born | Little Horsted, England |
9 June 1795||||||||||||||||||||
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Florence, Italy |
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Nationality | English | ||||||||||||||||||||
Spouse(s) | Anne Cuyler (m. 1819) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Parent(s) |
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Relatives | Henry Rose (brother)[2] | ||||||||||||||||||||
Ecclesiastical career | |||||||||||||||||||||
Church | Church of England | ||||||||||||||||||||
Ordained |
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Hugh James Rose (1795–1838) was an English Anglican priest and theologian who served as the second Principal of King's College, London.
Contents
Life
Rose was born at Little Horsted in Sussex on 9 June 1795 and educated at Uckfield School, where his father was Master, and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was conferred the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1817, but missed a fellowship.[4] He was then President of the Cambridge Union Society for the Michaelmas term of[citation needed] 1817.[5] Having been ordained to the diaconate in 1818, he was appointed to a cure in Buxted, Sussex, in 1819.[6] He married Anne Cuyler and was priested later that year.[1] In 1821, he was appointed to the vicarage of Horsham, Sussex.[6]
After travelling in Germany, Rose delivered as select preacher at Cambridge, four addresses against rationalism.[4] In 1827 he was collated to the prebend of Middleton, which he held until 1833.[7] In 1830 he accepted the rectory of Hadleigh, Suffolk, and in 1833 that of Fairsted, Essex, and in 1835 the perpetual curacy of St Thomas's, Southwark.[4] Rose was a high churchman, who to propagate his views in 1832 founded the British Magazine and so came into touch with the leaders of the Oxford Movement.[4] Out of a conference at his rectory in Hadleigh, Suffolk came the Association of Friends of the Church, formed by Hurrell Froude and William Palmer.[4]
In 1833–1834 Rose was professor of divinity at the University of Durham, a post which ill-health forced him to resign.[4] He was appointed Principal of King's College, London, in October 1836, but was attacked by influenza, and after two years of ill-health he died in Florence, Italy, on 22 December 1838.[4] He is buried in the English Cemetery, Florence, his name in the register given as "Ugo Giacomo Rose", his Scipio tomb having a lengthy epitaph in Latin.
Works
Rose published in 1825 as The State of the Protestant Religion in Germany. The book was severely criticized in Germany, and in England by Edward Pusey. In 1836 he became editor of the Encyclopædia Metropolitana, and he projected the New General Biographical Dictionary,[8] a scheme carried through by his brother Henry John Rose (1800–1873).
References
Footnotes
Bibliography
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Further reading
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External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: Hugh James Rose |
Academic offices | ||
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Preceded by | Principal of King's College, London 1836–1838 |
Succeeded by John Lonsdale |
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- 1795 births
- 1838 deaths
- 19th-century English Anglican priests
- 19th-century English Christian theologians
- Academics of Durham University
- Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
- Anglo-Catholic clergy
- Anglo-Catholic theologians
- Deaths from influenza
- English Anglican theologians
- English Anglo-Catholics
- English people of Scottish descent
- People from Little Horsted
- People educated at Uckfield School
- Presidents of the Cambridge Union
- Principals of King's College London
- 18th-century Anglican theologians
- 19th-century Anglican theologians
- Clan Rose