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  2. Jul 31, 1995 · Margaret Fell, known to many as the “Mother of Quakerism,” is arguably one of the most fascinating figures in Western religious history. Though frequently overlooked by historians, Margaret Fell played a germinal role in the development of the Friends (Quaker) movement, and her life presents a compelling picture of the power of faith and ...

  3. Margaret Fell, known traditionally as the "nursing mother of Quakerism," represents one of many early Friends whose role is being reconsidered in light of 17th-century English nonconformity. Her words and acts, when read in context of prevailing social attitudes of the time, testify to an articulate and determined woman who used her means and ...

  4. Margaret Fell was called the Nurturing Mother of Quakerism. Her home was the early organizational headquarters of the Religious society of Friends, as the Quakers are also known. Note that, like Betsy Ross , "Margaret Fell," the name she is best known by is neither the name she was born with (Margaret Askew), nor the name she died with, but was ...

  5. Jan 3, 2023 · Margaret Fell (1614–1702) is known as the mother of Quakerism due to her voluminous writings, organizational activity, and spiritual leadership within the early Quaker movement. In partnership with George Fox (1624–1691) and William Penn...

  6. May 20, 2013 · Margaret Fell was a woman of high social station, deep spirituality and strong convictions, and these qualities carried her from obscurity in the north of England to audiences with kings. She was one of the first to be convinced by Quakerism — the movement now known as The Religious Society of Friends, or simply “Friends.”

  7. c. 1614 – April 23, 1702. Margaret Fell or Margaret Fox a founder of the Religious Society of Friends, known popularly as the "mother of Quakerism", is considered one of the Valiant Sixty early Quaker preachers and missionaries. Born Margaret Askew in Dalton-in-Furness, Cumbria, England, she married Thomas Fell, a barrister, in 1632, and ...

  8. Jan 23, 2023 · First, Fell’s role as “mother” within the movement “took on a radical, apocalyptic tone as the mother of the new Jerusalem, where God’s divine, breaking into humanity’s presence was occurring in their present new age (152).”

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