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Nonconformists were
Protestant Christians who did not "conform" to the
governance and
usages of the
state church in England, and in
Wales until 1914, the...
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citizen to
comply with
certain laws, demands, or
commands of a
government Nonconformist (Protestantism), the
state of
Protestants in
England and
Wales who do...
- The
Nonconformist conscience was the
moralistic influence of the
Nonconformist churches in
British politics in the 19th and
early 20th centuries. Nonconformists...
- A
Nonconformist register is
broadly similar to a
parish register, but
deriving from a
nonconformist church or chapel.
Nonconformist churches do not conform...
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museum houses more than 60,000 works,
including Russian and
Soviet Nonconformist Art from the
acclaimed Dodge Collection,
American art from the eighteenth...
- England. The
college was
founded in
Birmingham in 1838 as a
college for
Nonconformist students. It
moved to
Oxford in 1886 and was
renamed Mansfield College...
- The non-conformists of the 1930s were
groups and
individuals during the inter-war
period in
France that were s****ing new
solutions to face the political...
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Thomas Kelly (13 July 1769 – 14 May 1855) was an
Irish evangelical,
known as a
Church of
Ireland cleric to 1803, hymn
writer and
founder of the Kellyites...
- of
Wales in 1823. The 18th-century
revival also
influenced the
older nonconformist churches, or
dissenters – the
Baptists and the
Congregationalists –...
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Soviet nonconformist art was
Soviet art
produced in the
former Soviet Union outside the
control of the
Soviet state started in the
Stalinist era, in particular...