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{{Short description|British cleric and musician}} | |||
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The following is a summary of key events from several obituaries.<ref name="auto1"/><ref>Liverpool Archdiocese Directory and Guide to the Quarant' Ore, 1930, p.29</ref><ref name="auto">The Musical Times, 70(1039), 848–848. </ref><ref>Daily Telegraph,19 July 1929</ref><ref>Liverpool Post and Mercury, 18 July 1929</ref><ref>Daily Express 18 July 1929</ref><ref>Evening Dispatch (Birmingham), 18 July 1929</ref><ref>Leicester Mercury, 18 JUly 1929</ref><ref>Derby Daily Telegraph, 18 July 1929</ref><ref>Somerset Guardian & Banstock observe, 26 July 2029</ref> The fact that these appeared in newspapers in different parts of England shows that he held wide notability. | The following is a summary of key events from several obituaries.<ref name="auto1"/><ref>Liverpool Archdiocese Directory and Guide to the Quarant' Ore, 1930, p.29</ref><ref name="auto">The Musical Times, 70(1039), 848–848. </ref><ref>Daily Telegraph,19 July 1929</ref><ref>Liverpool Post and Mercury, 18 July 1929</ref><ref>Daily Express 18 July 1929</ref><ref>Evening Dispatch (Birmingham), 18 July 1929</ref><ref>Leicester Mercury, 18 JUly 1929</ref><ref>Derby Daily Telegraph, 18 July 1929</ref><ref>Somerset Guardian & Banstock observe, 26 July 2029</ref> The fact that these appeared in newspapers in different parts of England shows that he held wide notability. | ||
'''Fr. Burge''' took Solemn Vows and became Subdeacon in 1969. He was ordained Priest in 1874 and, after some other posts, was Prior of Ampleforth from 1885 to 1897. From 1899, he settled as Parish Priest of ] and lived at the Presbytery in Aigburth Road, ], until his death in 1929, havng been nominated as Abbot of Westminster Cathedral in 1917. He is buried at ]. | '''Fr. Burge''' entered the Novitiate at Belmont in 1865 and took Solemn Vows and became Subdeacon in 1969. He was ordained Priest in 1874 and, after some other posts, was Prior of Ampleforth from 1885 to 1897. During his time there, he introduced significant developments to college education. These included lectures for small boys in memory and the introduction of public examinations through the Cambridge Higher Certificate. He also made participation in games compulsory and gave lectures in Science, Music and Art. From 1899, he settled as Parish Priest of ] and lived at the Presbytery in Aigburth Road, ], until his death in 1929, havng been nominated as Abbot of Westminster Cathedral in 1917. He is buried at ]. | ||
==Musical life== | ==Musical life== | ||
'''Fr. Burge''' was an accomplished musician and an authority on church music.<ref |
'''Fr. Burge''' was an accomplished musician and an authority on church music.<ref>Liverpool Archdiocese Directory and Guide to the Quarant' Ore, 1930, p.29</ref> During his time at Belmont, he undertook duties as organist and choir master.<ref>>English Benedictine Congregational History, Obituaries, http://www.plantata.org.uk/obits/matthews/burge_a.htm,</ref> He was a founder of the ] in ],<ref>Rodewald Concert Society Golden Jubilee 1911-1961, booklet published by the Society (780 RCS/8/1/2) </ref><ref>Archives of the Rodewald Concrt Society, Liverpool Record Office, Ref 780 RCS/1/1/1, 27 Apr 1911</ref> but resigned from the Committee in 1913. His compositions include: Songs ''Ave Maria! O Maiden, O Mother'', ''Poor Lorraine''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cpdl.org/index.php/Ave_Maria!_O_Maiden,_O_Mother_(Laurence_Ampleforth)|title=Ave Maria! O Maiden, O Mother (Laurence Ampleforth) - ChoralWiki|website=www.cpdl.org}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.avemariasongs.org/aves/A/Ampleforth.htm|title=Ampleforth, Laurence - Ave, Maria! O Maiden, O Mother!|website=www.avemariasongs.org}}</ref> and ''O Sacred Heart''.<ref>Hymnary.org</ref> For the Liverpool 700th Anniversary Pageant he also composed ''Chant of the Monks''.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://historicalpageants.ac.uk/pageants/1123/ | title=Liverpool 700th Anniversary Pageant | Historical Pageants }}</ref> For composing, he sometimes used the pseudonym ']'. | ||
==Sources== | ==Sources== | ||
# | # | ||
# | # | ||
#Obituaries, Refs 1- |
#Obituaries, Refs 1-10 | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Latest revision as of 17:04, 22 December 2024
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Submission declined on 24 February 2024 by Utopes (talk).This submission's references do not show that the subject qualifies for a Misplaced Pages article—that is, they do not show significant coverage (not just passing mentions) about the subject in published, reliable, secondary sources that are independent of the subject (see the guidelines on the notability of people). Before any resubmission, additional references meeting these criteria should be added (see technical help and learn about mistakes to avoid when addressing this issue). If no additional references exist, the subject is not suitable for Misplaced Pages.
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- Comment: The obituaries don't establish the notability, nor are the musical accomplishments passable via WP:NMUSIC. Utopes (talk / cont) 07:46, 24 February 2024 (UTC)
The Right Reverend Thomas Anselm Burge O.S.B., (14 September 1846 - 17 July 1929), aka Laurence Ampleforth, was a Catholic parish priest in Aigburth, Liverpool, England, and became Abbot of Westminster Cathedral. He was also an accomplished musician and expert on Church Music.
Early Life
Fr. Burge was born in London and educated first at Dr Crookall's School, Woolhampton and then from 1860 to 1865, at Ampleforth College.
Church life
The following is a summary of key events from several obituaries. The fact that these appeared in newspapers in different parts of England shows that he held wide notability.
Fr. Burge entered the Novitiate at Belmont in 1865 and took Solemn Vows and became Subdeacon in 1969. He was ordained Priest in 1874 and, after some other posts, was Prior of Ampleforth from 1885 to 1897. During his time there, he introduced significant developments to college education. These included lectures for small boys in memory and the introduction of public examinations through the Cambridge Higher Certificate. He also made participation in games compulsory and gave lectures in Science, Music and Art. From 1899, he settled as Parish Priest of St Austin's Church, Grassendale and lived at the Presbytery in Aigburth Road, Liverpool, until his death in 1929, havng been nominated as Abbot of Westminster Cathedral in 1917. He is buried at Ampleforth.
Musical life
Fr. Burge was an accomplished musician and an authority on church music. During his time at Belmont, he undertook duties as organist and choir master. He was a founder of the Rodewald Concert Society in Liverpool, but resigned from the Committee in 1913. His compositions include: Songs Ave Maria! O Maiden, O Mother, Poor Lorraine and O Sacred Heart. For the Liverpool 700th Anniversary Pageant he also composed Chant of the Monks. For composing, he sometimes used the pseudonym 'Laurence Ampleforth'.
Sources
- Rodewald Concert Society archives
- Ancestry
- Obituaries, Refs 1-10
References
- ^ English Benedictine Congregational History, Obituaries, http://www.plantata.org.uk/obits/matthews/burge_a.htm,
- Liverpool Archdiocese Directory and Guide to the Quarant' Ore, 1930, p.29
- The Musical Times, 70(1039), 848–848.
- Daily Telegraph,19 July 1929
- Liverpool Post and Mercury, 18 July 1929
- Daily Express 18 July 1929
- Evening Dispatch (Birmingham), 18 July 1929
- Leicester Mercury, 18 JUly 1929
- Derby Daily Telegraph, 18 July 1929
- Somerset Guardian & Banstock observe, 26 July 2029
- Liverpool Archdiocese Directory and Guide to the Quarant' Ore, 1930, p.29
- >English Benedictine Congregational History, Obituaries, http://www.plantata.org.uk/obits/matthews/burge_a.htm,
- Rodewald Concert Society Golden Jubilee 1911-1961, booklet published by the Society (780 RCS/8/1/2)
- Archives of the Rodewald Concrt Society, Liverpool Record Office, Ref 780 RCS/1/1/1, 27 Apr 1911
- "Ave Maria! O Maiden, O Mother (Laurence Ampleforth) - ChoralWiki". www.cpdl.org.
- "Ampleforth, Laurence - Ave, Maria! O Maiden, O Mother!". www.avemariasongs.org.
- Hymnary.org
- "Liverpool 700th Anniversary Pageant | Historical Pageants".
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