Wikiproyecto discusión:Cuaquerismo
Apariencia
Esto es hermoso, solo me pregunto es necesario un wikiproyecto cuando aún no hay una categoría, en todo caso en lo que se pueda ayudar, me avisas. Un gusto. --Nihilo 20:56 8 sep 2007 (CEST)
Artículos para traducir
[editar]He encontrado algunos artículos que creo que sería interesante traducir:
- American Friends Service Committee
- Quaker Peace and Social Witness
- Peace Testimony
- Friends' School, Lisburn
- Quaker Bible
Cuáqueros
[editar]A
[editar]B
[editar]- Edmund Backhouse, M.P. for Darlington
- James Backhouse
- Eric Baker (activist)
- Emily Greene Balch
- Mark Ballard
- Robert Barclay
- Bernard Barton
- John Barton (quaker)
- John Bartram
- Joel Bean
- Anthony Benezet
- Caleb P. Bennett
- Douglas C. Bennett
- Lewis Benson
- Albert Bigelow
- J. Brent Bill
- George Birkbeck
- Kenneth E. Boulding
- Samuel Bownas
- John Bowne
- Sandra Boynton
- John Bright
- Moses Brown
- Jocelyn Bell Burnell
- Edward Burrough
- Maria Louisa Bustill
- Smedley Butler
- Thomas S. Butler
- Charles Roden Buxton
C
[editar]- George Cadbury
- Henry Cadbury
- John Cadbury
- Arthur Capper
- Pierre Ceresole
- Ilka Chase
- Cyrus Clark
- James Clark
- Whittaker Chambers
- William Coddington
- Levi Coffin
- John S. Collins
- Peter Collinson FRS
- John Conard
- Anne Finch Conway
- William Cooper
- James A. Corbett
- Stephen Crisp
D
[editar]- John Dalton (1766 – 1844), chemist[1]
- Abraham Darby I (1678 – 1717), ironmaster[2]
- Abraham Darby II (1711 – 1763), ironmaster[3]
- Abraham Darby III (1750 – 1791), ironmaster[4]
- James Dean (1931-1955), actor[1]
- Dame Judi Dench (born December 9, 1934: living), actor[5]
- John Dickinson (1732 – 1808), American lawyer and Governor of Delaware and Pennsylvania.[6]
- Jonathan Dickinson, (1663-1722), merchant and politician.[7]
- Richard Dillingham, (1823 - 1850), abolitionist[8]
- Ambrose Dixon (c. 1619 - 1687), Colonial American who came to Maryland to escape persecution.[9]
- Henry Doubleday (1808-1875), entomologist and ornithologist.[10]
- Henry Doubleday (1810-1902), scientist and horticulturist.[11]
- Sue Doughty (1948-), politician[12]
- Paul Douglas (1892 – 1976) , economist and United States Senator.[13]
- Mary Dyer, (c.1611? – 1660) religious martyr[14]
E
[editar]- Arthur Stanley Eddington (1882 – 1944), astrophysicist[15]
- Paul Eddington (1927 – 1995), actor. [16]
- Fritz Eichenberg (1901 – 1990) , illustrator[17]
- George Ellis (born August 11, 1939: living), Templeton Prize winning cosmologist[18]
- Rowland Ellis (1650 – 1731), Welsh Quaker leader.[19]
- Thomas Ellwood (1639-1713) , religious writer[20]
- Joshua Evans (1731-1798), minister from Haddonfield, New Jersey[21]
F
[editar]- Chuck Fager, 20th Century Quaker writer and activist
- Margaret Fell, (1614 - 1702) one of the earliest Quakers, married to George Fox
- James Finlayson (1771–1852), Scottish engineer who industrialised the city of Tampere in Finland
- Mary Fisher, (ca. 1623 - 1698) early Quaker missionary
- Edwin B. Forsythe, (1916-1984) Representative for New Jersey.[22]
- Richard J. Foster, ecumenical leader & reformer, founder of Renovare
- John Fothergill,(1712 – 1780), English Quaker physician and philanthropist
- Barclay Fox (1817 - 1855), Diarist
- Caroline Fox (1819 - 1871), Diarist
- George Fox, founder of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers)
- Robert Were Fox I
- Robert Were Fox II, geologist
- Tom Fox, held captive and killed in Irak
- Ursula Franklin
- Francis Frith
- Christopher Fry
- Elizabeth Fry
- Joan Mary Fry
- Margery Fry
G
[editar]H
[editar]- Elizabeth Haddon (1680-1762) founder of Haddonfield, New Jersey
- Seok-heon Ham
- Cornelia Hancock, nurse
- Sheila Hancock, comedian
- Edmund Happold (1930 - 1996), engineer
- Jan de Hartog, author
- Jonathan Hazard, Continental congressman
- Edward Hicks, painter
- Elias Hicks, Quaker theologian
- Thomas Hodgkin, physician who documented Hodgkin's lymphoma
- Marshall Hodgson, historian
- Gerard Hoffnung, artist and humorist
- Christopher Holder, preacher
- David P. Holloway, (1809-1883) Representative from Indiana.[23]
- Rush D. Holt, Jr., U.S. Congressman
- Elizabeth Hooton, preacher, possibly the first Quaker after George Fox
- Herbert Hoover, U.S. President
- Johns Hopkins, philanthropist
- Luke Howard, meteorologist
- Francis Howgill, preacher and writer
- Geoffrey Hubbard, director of the National Council for Educational Technology
- Charles Humphreys(1714 – 1786), Continental Congressman[24]
- John Hunn, (1849-1926) A Governor of Delaware.[25]
- Alfred Hunt (1817-1888), American industrialist
- John Hunt (1712-1778), minister from London, England; one of the "Virginia Exiles"
- John Hunt (1740-1824), minister and journalist from Moorestown, New Jersey
J
[editar]- Rufus Jones, Quaker theologian[26]
- T. Canby Jones, Quaker peace activist, theologian, and professor emeritus at Wilmington College.[27]
K
[editar]- Thomas R. Kelly, Missionary, educator, and spiritual writer.[28]
- Sir Ben Kingsley, actor[29]
L
[editar]- Joseph Lancaster (1778 – 1838), Public education innovator.[30]
- John Lilburne (died August 29, 1657), Leveller who converted to the faith.[31]
- James Logan (1674 - 1751) , William Penn's secretary who had been an Anglican clergyman.[32]
- Kathleen Lonsdale (1903 - 1971) , scientist[33]
- Raph Levien (living), Free software author behind Ghostscript and Advogato.[34]
M
[editar]- Svetlana Sotiroff MacDonald[35]
- John Macmurray, Philosopher.[36]
- Dolley Madison, First Lady[37]
- Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge, Former South African Health Minister.[38]
- Elizabeth Magie, inventor of Monopoly[39]
- Dave Matthews, musician.[40]
- Edward R. Murrow, journalist.[41]
- Ethan Mordden, author
- Lucretia Mott, Abolitionist and suffragist.[42]
N
[editar]- James Nayler, Former soldier and member of the Valiant Sixty.[43]
- Sir George Newman, British Chief Medical Officer[44]
- Inazo Nitobe, Japanese diplomat, educator, author.[45]
- Richard Nixon, U.S. President.[46]
- Russ Nelson, open source software developer.[47]
- Philip Noel-Baker, Baron Noel-Baker, Diplomat and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate.[48]
O
[editar]- Amelia Opie, writer[49]
- Constantine Overton (1626/7-?1690), Quaker leader in Shrewsbury, Shropshire.[50]
P
[editar]- Parker Palmer, writer, teacher, activist[51]
- Alice Paul, suffragist from Mount Laurel, New Jersey.[52]
- Edward Pease, early railway owner in England.[53]
- Joseph Pease, first Quaker member of Parliament.[54]
- Isaac Penington - Early Quaker.[55]
- William Penn, founder of Pennsylvania
- Olive Pink, botanical illustrator, gardener, anthropologist, and activist for aboriginal rights.[56]
- Gerald Priestland, BBC broadcaster[57]
- Edmond Privat, famous swiss ambassador of esperanto internaltional language, co-founder of the "Society of Nations", close friend of Mahatma Gandhi and Romain Rolland, and Neuchatel university teacher.[58]
R
[editar]- Arthur Raistrick, Conscientious Objector, geologist, industrial archealogist, and socialist.[59]
- Bonnie Raitt, musician[60]
- John Raitt, actor
- Lewis Fry Richardson, mathematician and geophysicist.[61]
- John Wigham Richardson, shipbuilder[62][63]
- Joseph Rowntree, chocolatier and educationist.[64]
- Bayard Rustin, civil rights leader.[65]
S
[editar]- Susanna M. Salter, first woman mayor in the United States
- Anna Sewell, author
- Moses Sheppard, philanthropist and abolitionist
- Philip Sherman, first Secretary of State of Rhode Island
- Scott Simon, journalist and broadcaster
- John Alexander Sinton, winner of the Victoria Cross
- Joan Slonczewski, biologist and award-winning science fiction writer
- Alys Pearsall Smith
- Hannah Whitall Smith
- Robert Pearsall Smith
- Lawrence Southwick
- Cassandra Burnell Southwick
- Robert Strettell, early mayor of Philadelphia
- Joseph Sturge
- Donald Swann, composer, musician and entertainer
- Noah Haynes Swayne
T
[editar]- Joseph Taylor, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics[66]
- Valerie Taylor, prominent lesbian novelist of the 1950s-1980s.[67]
- Philip E. Thomas, first president of the B&O Railroad (the first railroad in the US)[68]
- Peterson Toscano, actor, playwright and gay activist.[69]
- Connor Trinneer, actor[70]
- D. Elton Trueblood, theologian[71]
- Daniel Hack Tuke, physician and expert in mental illness[72]
- James Hack Tuke[73]
- Henry Tuke, co-founder of the York Retreat[74]
- Samuel Tuke, wrote about treatment of mental illness.[75]
- William Tuke, co-founder of the York Retreat[76][77]
- James Turrell, artist[78]
W
[editar]- Mary Vaux Walcott
- George Washington Walker
- Benjamin West
- Jessamyn West
- Joseph Wharton
- Ann Cooper Whitall
- John Greenleaf Whittier
- John Richardson Wigham
- John Wilbur
- Dallas Willard
- Waldo Williams
- Anna Wing
- Gerrard Winstanley
- Caspar Wistar
- Victoria Wood
- John Woolman (1720-1772)
Y
[editar]- ↑ John Rylands University Library
- ↑ The Darby Dynasty
- ↑ The Darby Dynasty page 2
- ↑ Ibid
- ↑ The Guardian
- ↑ Delaware.gov profile
- ↑ The Cambridge History of English and American Literature
- ↑ Find-A-Grave
- ↑ Delmarva Settlers site
- ↑ Darwin Online
- ↑ Cogges Hall Museum
- ↑ Sue Dough.org
- ↑ Bowdoin.edu
- ↑ Mayflower Families
- ↑ "Astrophysics and Mysticism: the life of Arthur Stanley Eddington" by Ian H Hutchinson of MIT
- ↑ BBC Profile
- ↑ Interview with Fritz Eichenberg
- ↑ Friends Journal
- ↑ Welsh Biography Online
- ↑ 1911 Encyclopedia
- ↑ Joshua Evans Papers, ca. 1788- ca. 1804: Swarthmore
- ↑ Political Graveyard
- ↑ Political Graveyard
- ↑ Political Graveyard
- ↑ National Governors Association
- ↑ Rufus Jones, Master Quaker By David Hinshaw
- ↑ Friends United Meeting
- ↑ Spirituality Today
- ↑ The Scotsman's "Living" section
- ↑ Dictionary of Canadian biography
- ↑ Spartacus schoolnet
- ↑ Penn State bio
- ↑ 20th c. women in Physics site at UCLA
- ↑ Raph Levien homepage.
- ↑ Canadians for equal marriage
- ↑ John Macmurray foundation
- ↑ The Dolley Madison Project
- ↑ Department of Health profile on Madlala-Routledge
- ↑ BALLBUSTER? True Confessions of a Marxist Businessman
- ↑ CNN
- ↑ Medal of Freedom Profile
- ↑ Smithsonian
- ↑ Harvard's Libraries and the Quaker Jesus
- ↑ The Oxford Illustrated Companion to Medicine
- ↑ Columbia University on a book he wrote
- ↑ Nixon Library Foundation
- ↑ Quakers.org
- ↑ Nobel Biography
- ↑ University of Toronto Libray
- ↑ Biography Index Number 101020970
- ↑ Augsburg College
- ↑ Alice Paul Institute
- ↑ Darlington, Quaker Photograph Albums
- ↑ Spartacus Schoolnet
- ↑ U of Penn copy of a Quaker work he wrote
- ↑ University of Tasmania Profile
- ↑ Coming Home:an introduction to the Quakers
- ↑ Swiss Quakers site
- ↑ University of Bradford Library: The Elizabeth and Arthur Raistrick Collection
- ↑ Rolling Stone bio
- ↑ McTutor
- ↑ Quakers, Jews, and Science
- ↑ Quakers and Quakerism in Scotland: a bibliography
- ↑ A Quaker Business Man: The Life of Joseph Rowntree 1836-1925 By Anne Vernon
- ↑ Bayard Rustin Film Project
- ↑ Nobel Autobiography
- ↑ Cornell News
- ↑ Howard, George Washington (1873)."The Monumental City, Its Past History and Present Resources". J.D. Ehlers
- ↑ Bio
- ↑ Trek Today: "It's a whole conversation itself to describe what that is and what that means to me. I describe growing up Quaker, and people are like, 'Dude, why can't I be a Quaker?'" He [Trineer] said that he finds the religion very liberating in that there is no minister or senior authority at a meeting.
- ↑ New York Times obituary
- ↑ Victorian Lunatics by Marlene Ann Arieno
- ↑ Profile at Irish famine site
- ↑ Quaker Tracts at USC
- ↑ A Critical Dictionary of English Literature, and British and American By Samuel Austin Allibone (pg 2470)
- ↑ BBC biography
- ↑ University of York
- ↑ PBS