James Moyes
James Moyes (1851–1927) was a writer, theologian, and controversialist.
Moyes was born Edinburgh, Scotland.[1] He was educated in Ireland, France, and Rome at the Venerabile. Ordained into the priesthood in 1875, he was later appointed professor at St Bede's College, Manchester, England. He was appointed canon theologian of Salford Chapter, 1891, and of the Westminster Chapter, 1895. In 1896, he served on the Papal Commission in Rome on Anglican matters on which he was an authority. In 1903 he was chosen as sub-delegate Apostolic for the Cause of English Martyrs. He edited the Dublin Review until 1903, contributed a vast amount of controversial literature on theological subjects to The Tablet, and wrote Aspects of Anglicanism, 1906.
Moyes died in London, England in 1927.
Works or publications
- Moyes, James (September 1912). "Père Hyacinthe's Marriage". The Nineteenth Century and After. New York; London: Leonard Scott Publication; Spottiswoode. 72 (427): 581–588. LCCN sf96091374. OCLC 08456197. Retrieved 7 April 2013.
References
- 1910 New Catholic DictionaryArchived August 25, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.