Allies, Thomas William
ALLIES, THOMAS WILLIAM: English Roman
Catholic; b. at Midsomer Norton (14 m. n.e. of
Glastonbury), Somersetshire, Feb. 12, 1813; d. at
St. John’s Wood, London, June 17, 1903. He was
first class in classics at Oxford, 1832. He took orders in the Anglican Church in 1838, serving for two
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years as chaplain to the bishop of London and for
ten years as rector of Launton. In 1850 he was received into the Roman Catholic Church by his
friend, Cardinal, then Father, Newman. He wrote
extensively on theological subjects, his principal
works being, St. Peter, his Name and Office (London,
1852); The Formation of Christendom (8 vols., 1861-95);
Per crucem ad lucem (2 vols., 1879); A Life’s
Decision (1880); Church and State (1882), a continuation of
The Formation of Christendom; and
The Throne of the Fisherman (1887).