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Letter from Charles James Blomfield
Add. MS a/55/60 · Item · 4 Mar. [1850]
Parte de Additional Manuscripts a

[London] - CJB has been unable to examine the Athenaeus. If the MS notes on the Athenaeus are really by [Pareus] then the College would do well to purchase them.

Franks of bishops
Add. MS a/77/5-25 · Item · 1813-1838, [18--]
Parte de Additional Manuscripts a

Part of a collection gathered by Cordelia Whewell. See also items in this box: 26-125, and 273-323.

Franks of:

  • Hon. Shute Barrington, Bishop of Durham
  • Henry Bathurst, Bishop of Norwich
  • Christopher Bethell, Bishop of Gloucester, later Bangor
  • Charles James Blomfield, Bishop of Chester, later London
  • Thomas Burgess, Bishop of Salisbury
  • Robert James Carr, Bishop of Chichester
  • Edward Copleston, Bishop of Llandaff
  • Edward Harcourt, Archbishop of York
  • William Howley, Archbishop of Canterbury
  • John Banks Jenkinson, Bishop of St David's
  • John Kaye, Bishop of Bristol, later Lincoln
  • Charles Thomas Longley, Bishop of Ripon
  • John Lonsdale, Bishop of Lichfield
  • John Luxmoore, Bishop of St Asaph
  • Spencer Madan, Bishop of Peterborough
  • Edward Maltby, Bishop of Chichester, later Durham
  • Herbert Marsh, Bishop of Peterborough
Letter to Charles James Blomfield
Add. MS a/201/48 · Item · 26 Mar. 1833
Parte de Additional Manuscripts a

London - CJB has now read over half of WW's Bridgewater Treatise with great pleasure. The Archbishop talks about it in the strongest terms and 'thinks it is the most important work we have had for a long time'.

Letter from Charles James Blomfield
Add. MS a/201/47 · Item · 16 Mar. 1833
Parte de Additional Manuscripts a

Fulham - CJB has received WW's Bridgewater Treatise: 'I may very safely thank you for the service which you have rendered to the cause of Religion'.

Letter from Charles James Blomfield
Add. MS a/201/45 · Item · 20 Oct. 1832
Parte de Additional Manuscripts a

London - CJB has not time to look over the whole MS of WW's Bridgewater Treatise [Astronomy and General Physics Considered with Reference to Natural Theology, 1833]: 'much harm may be done to the cause of Revealed Religion by the use of weak and untenable reasonings, and the injudicious pressing of questionable analogies'. CJB would be willing to read a part of the treatise which WW thinks is representative of the whole. WW should not make his account of undulations a material part of his argument.

Letter from Charles James Blomfield
Add. MS a/201/44 · Item · 4 Sept. 1830
Parte de Additional Manuscripts a

Rheola, South Wales - Davies Gilbert has consulted CJB regarding the subjects to include for the Bridgewater Treatises. He has recommended WW to do the branch on astronomy, for which he would expect him to receive six or seven hundred pounds.

Letter from J. H. Monk to Jane Smart Monk
MONK/B/34 · Item · 27 May 1818
Parte de Papers of the Monk and Sanford families

Supervised College Examinations from 9 until past 8 each day, 5 out of 7 in the first class of the first and second year are his own pupils, election for the Woodwardian chair, Thomas Smart Hughes' opponent in his act for BD was Blomfield, James Smith's attack on Cambridge for opposing his application as Professor of Botany on the grounds of his nonconformity, hopes he will get a set of rooms vacated by Hailstone, Professor Everett in Cambridge

William Whewell to Julius Charles Hare
Add. MS a/215/30 · Item · 4 Jan. 1834
Parte de Additional Manuscripts a

WW has 'been dining with the Bishop of London of whom you talk so ireverently. In defence of my reference to him I have this to say: that my principal object in the passage you refer to was to present to peoples minds a view in which they might rest, with no disquisitive from fear of dangerous error, and wish something like a primitive idea in a case when human nature craves it'. WW thought that in 'such a case the opinion of a man of good practical understanding, which Blomfield [Charles J. Blomfield] is, though no metaphysician, and of a bishop to boot, was very much suited to my purpose'. John M. Kemble is to lecture on Anglo-Saxon next term: 'It appears to be likely that he will be well attended, and one might if once chose make it an occasion of reviving the Philological Society'.