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Froude took his degree in 1824 with a double second class in
Classics and Mathematics, and became a Fellow at Oriel in 1826. The following year he became a Tutor with Wilberforce and Newman as colleagues. Froude was at first shy of Newman, because of Newman's Liberalism. He wrote Wilberforce, "Newman
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is a fellow that I like more the more I think of him; only I would give a few odd pence if he were not a heretic." Around 1828, Froude brought Keble and Newman together. That same year he received Deacon's orders in the Church of
England; and the year after Priest's from the Bishop of Oxford.
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they visited
Gibraltar, Malta, the Ionian Islands and, subsequently, Sicily, Naples and Rome. In April the Froudes returned home, while Newman returned to Sicily alone, where he fell dangerously ill with gastric or typhoid fever, but recovered.
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in the
Barbados, to alleviate his medical condition. He returned to England in 1835. Froude died from the tuberculosis the following year at the age of thirty-two at the Parsonage House in Dartington, where he was born.
117:, a group of Christian theologians, including Keble and Newman, who argued for the reinstatement of lost Christian traditions of faith and their inclusion into Anglican liturgy and theology. He was associated with the
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to read during the Long
Vacation. Williams, who did not know Froude well at that time, said of him, "There was an originality of thought and a reality about him which were very refreshing."
144:, a collection of Froude's letters and journals, "an uninhibited assault on Protestantism" that pushed the Oxford Movement closer to Anglo-Catholicism. These were later interpreted by Sir
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Froude, who suffered from tuberculosis, spent the winter of 1832–33 travelling in the
Mediterranean with his father and Newman for the sake of his health. On board the mail steamship
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at the age of thirteen. His mother, the first great influence in his life, died when he was eighteen; he matriculated at
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Church, State, and
Society: The Attitudes of John Keble, Richard Hurrell Froude, and John Henry Newman, 1827–1845
125:, which they published between 1833 and 1841 in the early stages of the movement. Froude contributed four of the
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A Dictionary of
Hymnology, Setting Forth the Origin and History of Christian Hymns of All Ages and Nations
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Much of the rest of his life was spent outside
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35:(25 March 1803 – 28 February 1836) was an Anglican priest and an early leader of the
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Lead, Kindly Light: Studies of Saints and Heroes of the Oxford
Movement
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Brendon, Piers (1972). "Newman, Keble and Froude's Remains".
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On his return, Froude contributed to the formation of the
216:. New York: Macmillan – via Project Canterbury.
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After his death, Newman and other friends edited the
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Remains of the late Reverend Richard Hurrell Froude
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257:Remains of the Late Rev. Richard Hurrell Froude
233:. Oxford University Press. pp. 530–531.
230:The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
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194:. New York: Dover Publications. p. 610.
339:. Worthing, England: Churchman Publishing.
360:. T. C. & E. C. Jack. Archived from
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59:) and the elder brother of historian
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333:Rowlands, John Henry Lewis (1989).
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227:Cross, Frank Leslie, ed. (1957).
63:and engineer and naval architect
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254:Froude, Richard Hurrell (1838).
417:Alumni of Oriel College, Oxford
412:People educated at Eton College
208:Morse-Boycott, Desmond (1933).
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210:"Richard Hurrell Froude"
175:"Richard Hurrell Froude"
82:At Oxford his tutor was
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33:Richard Hurrell Froude
18:Richard Hurrell Froude
427:Anglo-Catholic clergy
310:Froude, R. H. (1838)
188:Julian, John (1907).
67:. He was educated at
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127:Tracts for the Times
123:Tracts for the Times
71:school, and went to
61:James Anthony Froude
57:Archdeacon of Totnes
357:The Oxford Movement
328:. Methuen & Co.
437:English male poets
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