CARDINAL HENRY EDWARD MANNING
\kˈɑːdɪnə͡l hˈɛnɹi ˈɛdwəd mˈanɪŋ], \kˈɑːdɪnəl hˈɛnɹi ˈɛdwəd mˈanɪŋ], \k_ˈɑː_d_ɪ_n_əl h_ˈɛ_n_ɹ_i_ ˈɛ_d_w_ə_d m_ˈa_n_ɪ_ŋ]\
Definitions of CARDINAL HENRY EDWARD MANNING
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A distinguished English Roman Catholic prelate and religious writer; born at Totteridge, Hertfordshire, July 15, 1808; died Jan. 14, 1892. Originally a clergyman of the Church of England, in which he rose to be archdeacon of Chichester (1840), he became a Roman Catholic priest in 1851; archbishop of Westminster in 1865; cardinal in 1875. He founded the Roman Catholic University of Kensington in 1874. He was a friend of the laboring classes. He wrote: "Unity of the Church" (1842); "Temporal Mission of the Holy Ghost" (3d ed. 1877); "The Catholic Church and Modern Society" (1880); "The Eternal Priesthood" (1883); "Religio Viatoris" (A Traveler's Religion: 3d ed. 1888); etc.
By Charles Dudley Warner
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