Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Wilberforce, William (1759–1833)

View through CrossRef
William Wilberforce provided the anti‐slavery movement with a dynamic and charismatic political force that effected change in both houses of parliament. He was born in Hull of a prosperous merchant family but decided early that he did not wish to go into trade. An indifferent student, Wilberforce discovered an interest in politics very early and became a member of parliament for Hull in the House of Commons at the age of 21. Only four years later he was elected as representative for Yorkshire, England's largest county. Even in his early political career he exhibited a zeal for reform, and he learned much about dealing with parliamentary politics. He made important political contacts, including William Pitt the younger, who became prime minister in 1783. Pitt later encouraged Wilberforce to champion the cause of abolishing the slave trade. In 1785, Wilberforce underwent a profound conversion experience and embraced evangelical Christianity. Pitt and evangelical minister John Newton, however, counseled him against giving up his political career for church life, and his religious zeal translated into a strong desire to make a positive contribution to society, which he perceived as sliding toward moral bankruptcy.
Title: Wilberforce, William (1759–1833)
Description:
William Wilberforce provided the anti‐slavery movement with a dynamic and charismatic political force that effected change in both houses of parliament.
He was born in Hull of a prosperous merchant family but decided early that he did not wish to go into trade.
An indifferent student, Wilberforce discovered an interest in politics very early and became a member of parliament for Hull in the House of Commons at the age of 21.
Only four years later he was elected as representative for Yorkshire, England's largest county.
Even in his early political career he exhibited a zeal for reform, and he learned much about dealing with parliamentary politics.
He made important political contacts, including William Pitt the younger, who became prime minister in 1783.
Pitt later encouraged Wilberforce to champion the cause of abolishing the slave trade.
In 1785, Wilberforce underwent a profound conversion experience and embraced evangelical Christianity.
Pitt and evangelical minister John Newton, however, counseled him against giving up his political career for church life, and his religious zeal translated into a strong desire to make a positive contribution to society, which he perceived as sliding toward moral bankruptcy.

Related Results

William Wilberforce
William Wilberforce
Born to a merchant family in England’s east coast port of Kingston-upon-Hull, William Wilberforce (b. 1759–d. 1833) went on to become the most famous of British abolitionists. Educ...
Inexperienced Humanitarians? William Wilberforce, William Pitt, and the Execution Crisis of the 1780s
Inexperienced Humanitarians? William Wilberforce, William Pitt, and the Execution Crisis of the 1780s
For most historians, William Wilberforce is not immediately associated with the history of capital punishment, at least not beyond his occasional efforts to solicit mercy for indiv...
Author Index
Author Index
Aalto, S., 2352 Abankwa, D., 32 Abd El‐Aleem, S.A., 650 Abizaid, A., 2488 Ackerman, S.L., 11 Adams, D.J., 2410 Agasse, F., 1459 Aggleton, J.P., 3291 Aguilar, J., 3006 Ahmed, S., 38...
William Wilberforce (1759 - 1833)
William Wilberforce (1759 - 1833)
Portrait of William Wilberforce, anti-slavery campaigner and politician...
Studi Komparatif Efektivitas Mckenzie Exercises dan William Flexion Exercises pada Myogenic Low Back Pain
Studi Komparatif Efektivitas Mckenzie Exercises dan William Flexion Exercises pada Myogenic Low Back Pain
McKenzie and William Flexion exercises are physiotherapeutic interventions for LBPM (Low Back Myogenic Pain) to reduce pain and improve functional activity. This study aims to comp...
Atlantic Affinities
Atlantic Affinities
This Chapter deals with Anglophilia as an animating principle in a lot American anti-slavery thought and practice. It begins with an account of how early anti-slavery activists app...
Christen Djurhuus' færøske præstetal(1759)
Christen Djurhuus' færøske præstetal(1759)
Úrtak Útgáva av tí føroyska prestatalinum sum Christen Djurhuus próstur gjørdi í 1759. Tað sigur frá prestunum ið høvdu verið í teimum sjey prestagjøldunum, rektarunum ið hø...

Back to Top