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Keble, John
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Keble, John (1792–1866)

Anglican priest and religious poet. His sermon on the decline of religious faith in Britain, preached in 1833, heralded the start of the Oxford Movement, a Catholic revival in the Church of England. He wrote four of the Tracts for the Times (theological treatises in support of the movement), and was professor of poetry at Oxford 1831–41. His book of poems, The Christian Year (1827), was very popular in the 19th century. Keble College, Oxford, was founded in 1870 in his memory.

He was born in Fairford, Gloucestershire, and was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He was fellow and tutor of Oriel College 1811–23. In 1835 he accepted the country vicarage of Hursley, Hampshire, where he stayed until his death. The High Church sympathies of the Oxford Movement are apparent in the Tracts for the Times, in his standard edition of Richard Hooker's works (1836), and in all his sermons and poems.



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So, for example, while Lincoln School of Architecture, the extensions to Keble College Oxford, and a house in Hampstead called The Priory are described and analysed comprehensively, the alterations to the Ashmolean Museum and the various university masterplans get short shrift.
There are primarily three people who contributed something characteristically to the success and the thought of the Oxford Movement: John Keble (1792-1866), John Henry Newman (1801-90), and Edward B.
Friendship may seem an odd choice for a entire chapter but Faught makes a good case that the personal loyalty that existed among Hurrell Froude, John Keble, and Newman was at the heart of the Oxford movement.
 
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