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  1. 14 Samuel Wilberforce’s younger brother, Robert Wilberforce, was a Fellow of Oriel College, and had been a tutor along with Newman and Hurrell Froude from 1826 to 1831. . Originally closer to Pusey, Robert Wilberforce was drawn to Newman because of their common dedication to giving their Oriel tutorships a pastoral aspect (Newsome, The Parting of Friends, pp. 92-96), as well as, no doubt ...

  2. It was at this event that Samuel Wilberforce, Bishop of Oxford, and Thomas Huxley, a biologist from London, went head-to-head in a debate about one of the most controversial ideas of the 19th century – Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection.

  3. 7 de set. de 2021 · September 7, 2021. Samuel Wilberforce, an English Anglican cleric, was born Sep. 7, 1805. Wilberforce rose to prominence in the Church of England, becoming Bishop of Oxford and Dean of Westminster in the same year, 1845. By all accounts, he was a gifted speaker, and he had some interest in science, since he was elected to Fellowship in the ...

  4. Samuel Wilberforce (1805–1873) was the son of William Wilberforce, the MP who led the anti-slave-trade movement. Samuel was Bishop of Oxford from 1845 to 1869, and was known as “Soapy Sam”. He was then Bishop of Winchester from 1869 until July 1873, when he was thrown from his horse on the Surrey downs and died instantly. He is most ...

  5. Both the bishop of Oxford, Samuel Wilberforce, and Thomas Huxley, one of Darwin's staunch defenders, wrote long reviews of Darwin's Origin of Species that accurately reveal their differences. In Wilberforce's extensive review, the majority of space was devoted to what he regarded as the scientific and philosophical shortcomings of Darwin's theory.

  6. A Study of Samuel Wilberforce ’ in History Today, XIII, no. 9, 624 – 632 Google Scholar. Page 27 of note 1 Page 27 of note 1 Simeon’s sermon on ‘Christ Crucified, or Evangelical Religion describ ed’ (1811), discussed in Willmer , H. , ‘ Evangelicalism 1785-1835 ’ (Hulsean Prize Essay in Cambridge University Library ), 22 Google Scholar ; Gladstone , W. E. , Gleanings of Past ...

  7. The debate was dominated by its two individuals: Thomas Huxley and Bishop Samuel Wilberforce. Huxley, nicknamed “Darwin’s Bulldog,” was a biologist and an avid defender of Darwin’s 1859 Origin of Species. Wilberforce, also called “Soapy Sam” for his “greasy” demeanor, was the Bishop of Oxford and a proponent of biblical literalism.