Tag: Howell Harris
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Ann Griffiths (1776–1805): The Mystic Voice of Welsh Methodism

Within the religious and cultural history of Wales, few figures possess the quiet yet enduring authority of Ann Griffiths, the celebrated hymn writer of Montgomeryshire. Though her life was tragically short, ending at the age of only twenty-nine, her influence on Welsh Nonconformist spirituality has been profound and lasting. In an era when women rarely…
Antony David Davies
Ann Griffiths, books, Calvinistic Methodists, christianity, Daniel Rowland, Dolwar Fach, faith, history of Welsh chapels, Howell Harris, Llanfihangel-yng-Ngwynfa, Methodist revival Wales, Mid Wales history, Montgomeryshire culture, montgomeryshire-history, Rural Wales history, Seiadau, spirituality, Thomas Charles of Bala, Welsh chapel culture, Welsh cultural history, Welsh devotional literature, Welsh evangelical revival, Welsh heritage, Welsh historical biography, Welsh hymn tradition, Welsh hymn writer, Welsh hymnody, Welsh language literature, Welsh literary figures, Welsh Methodism, Welsh Methodist theology, Welsh mysticism, Welsh Nonconformity, Welsh poetry, Welsh Protestant history, Welsh religious history, Welsh religious revival, Welsh spiritual poetry, Welsh women in history, William Williams Pantycelyn, women in Welsh religion, writing -
Thomas Charles of Bala (1755–1814): Scripture, Education, and the Institutionalisation of the Welsh Revival

Among the architects of modern Welsh religious culture, few figures exercised an influence comparable to Thomas Charles of Bala. A Calvinistic Methodist minister, educational reformer, and promoter of biblical literacy, Charles played a decisive role in transforming the evangelical revival of eighteenth-century Wales into the structured Nonconformist culture that would dominate Welsh society throughout the…
Antony David Davies
18th century Wales, 19th-century-wales, Bala Merionethshire history, Bala Wales history, bible, British and Foreign Bible Society, Calvinistic Methodism, christianity, Daniel Rowland, faith, Griffith Jones Llanddowror, History, history of education in Wales, history of Sunday schools Wales, Howell Harris, jesus, Mary Jones Welsh Bible story, Merionethshire history, Nonconformist Wales, Presbyterian Church of Wales history, religion in Wales history, Snowdonia history, Thomas Charles, Thomas Charles of Bala, Welsh Bible history, Welsh biography, Welsh chapel culture, Welsh cultural history, Welsh evangelical revival, Welsh historical figures, Welsh language and religion, Welsh literacy history, Welsh Methodist Revival, Welsh Nonconformity, Welsh Protestant history, Welsh religious history, Welsh Social History, Welsh Sunday schools -
William Williams Pantycelyn (1717–1791), The Voice of the Welsh Revival and the Making of a Singing Nation

In my earlier essays on Daniel Rowland, the great evangelist of the Welsh Methodist Revival, and Howell Harris, the organiser and engine who turned revival into a disciplined movement, I explored two forms of power that shaped modern Wales. The first was the power of the pulpit, preaching as national event, the sermon as moral…
Antony David Davies
18th century Wales, bible, Calvinistic Methodists, Carmarthenshire, Chapel culture, christianity, congregational singing, Daniel Rowland, evangelical revival, faith, History, Howell Harris, jesus, Llandovery, Llangeitho, Methodist Revival, Nonconformist Wales, Pantycelyn, revival hymns, Sunday schools, Trefeca, Welsh Calvinistic Methodism, Welsh chapel history, Welsh culture and identity, Welsh devotional literature, Welsh evangelicalism, Welsh hymnody, Welsh hymns, Welsh language, Welsh literature, Welsh Methodist Revival, Welsh national identity, Welsh Nonconformity, Welsh poets, Welsh preaching, Welsh religious history, Welsh singing tradition, Welsh Social History, Welsh spirituality, William Williams, William Williams Pantycelyn -
Howell Harris (1714–1773), The Engine of the Welsh Revival and the Birth of an Evangelical Wales

This article follows my recent study of Daniel Rowland (1713–1790), the great evangelist of the Welsh Methodist Revival and one of the defining architects of modern Welsh Nonconformity. If Rowland represents the revival at its most visible, the pulpit phenomenon, the national preacher, the man whose sermons drew thousands, then Howell Harris must be understood…
Antony David Davies
18th century Wales, bible, Brecknockshire, Breconshire, Calvinistic Methodists, chapel societies, christianity, church, Church of England in Wales, Daniel Rowland, evangelical revival, History, Howell Harris, jesus, lay preaching, Llangeitho, Methodist Revival, Nonconformist Wales, religious societies, revival preaching, Sunday School Movement, Talgarth, Trefeca, Welsh Calvinistic Methodism, Welsh chapel history, Welsh culture and identity, Welsh evangelicalism, Welsh hymnody, Welsh language and religion, Welsh Methodist Revival, Welsh moral culture, Welsh Nonconformity, Welsh preaching, Welsh Protestantism, Welsh religious history, Welsh Social History, Welsh spirituality, William Williams Pantycelyn -
Daniel Rowland (1713–1790), The Great Evangelist of Wales, and the Making of Modern Welsh Nonconformity

There are certain names in Welsh religious history which do not merely belong to their century, they reshape the centuries that follow. Daniel Rowland of Llangeitho is one of those figures. In the eighteenth century, when Wales was still largely rural, linguistically distinct, and socially conservative, Rowland became the most powerful preacher the nation had…
Antony David Davies
18th century Wales, bible, Calvinism in Wales, Cardiganshire history, Ceredigion history, christianity, Daniel Rowland, evangelical revival, faith, History, history of Christianity in Wales, Howell Harris, jesus, Llangeitho, Methodist History, religion and society, Rural Wales, social history of Wales, the Welsh pulpit, Trevecca, Wales in the eighteenth century, Welsh Calvinistic Methodism, Welsh Chapels, Welsh Communities, Welsh culture, Welsh history, Welsh hymnody, Welsh identity, Welsh language, Welsh Methodist Revival, Welsh ministers, Welsh Nonconformity, Welsh preaching, Welsh religious history, Welsh spirituality, William Williams Pantycelyn
