- Robert Isaac Wilberforce
Robert Isaac Wilberforce (December
1802 -3 February 1857 ), English clergyman and writer, second son ofWilliam Wilberforce , was born in December 1802. He was educated atOriel College, Oxford , taking a double first in 1823.In 1826 he was chosen fellow of Oriel and was ordained, among his friends and colleagues being Newman, Pusey and Keble. For a few years he was one of the tutors at Oriel, but the provost,
Edward Hawkins , disliked his religious views, and in 1831 he resigned and left Oxford. In 1832 he obtained the living ofEast Farleigh ,Kent , which in 1840 he exchanged for that ofBurton Agnes , near Hull. In 1841 he was appointed archdeacon of theEast Riding of Yorkshire . About this time Wilberforce became very intimate with Manning, and many letters on theological and ecclesiastical questions passed between them. In 1851 Manning joined theRoman Catholic Church , and three years later Wilberforce took the same step. He was preparing for his ordination when he died atAlbano on the3 February 1857 . He was pre-deceased by his first wifeAgnes Everilda Frances Wrangham (1800-1834) and Jane Legard (d 1854). He was survived by two sons, the younger of whom,Edward Wilberforce (1834-1914), became one of the masters of theSupreme Court of Judicature . Edward's son,Lionel Robert Wilberforce (1861-1944), was in 1900 appointed professor of physics in theUniversity of Liverpool . His other children included:*
William Francis Wilberforce (1833-1905), Vicar of Brodsworth
* SirHerbert William Wrangham Wilberforce , Barrister (1864-1941)
*Alexander (Alex) Basil Edward Wilberforce (1867-1902)
*Evelyn Agnes Fannie Wilberforce (1872-1954)R.I. Wilberforce assisted his brother,
Bishop of Oxford Samuel Wilberforce (1805-1873)to write the "Life" and to edit the "Correspondence" of his father. His other writings include: "Church Courts and Church Discipline" (1843); "Doctrine of the Holy Eucharist" (1853); "Doctrine of the Incarnation in Relation to Mankind and the Church" (1848 and later editions); "The Five Empires, a Sketch of Ancient History" (1840); "A Sketch of the History of Erastianism" (1851); "An Enquiry into the Principles of Church Authority" (1854); and a romance, "Rutilius and Lucius" (1842).References
*1911
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