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  1. Welcome to Annie Besant

  2. Annie Wood was born in London on Oct. 1, 1847, to a well-connected but declining family, mostly of Irish descent. Her 7-year marriage to Frank Besant, an Anglican vicar, by whom she had two children, ended in separation in 1873, when she declared herself an unbeliever. The next year Besant joined Charles Bradlaugh in his Secularist movement ...

  3. 26. Nov. 2023 · Annie Besant. Annie Besant (1 October 1847 – 20 September 1933) was an Anglo-Irish orator, writer, and social rights activist. She is well known from her role in the Indian National Congress during the struggle for Indian home rule, and for her support of national education in India.

  4. Âgée de vingt ans, en 1867, Annie, influencée par les valeurs évangéliques de sa mère, épousa sans enthousiasme un pasteur anglican, Frank Besant (1840-1917). Alors très croyante, elle s’imaginait, en tant que femme de pasteur, une mission à la hauteur de son sens du devoir. Durant ses fiançailles, Annie découvrit des incohérences ...

  5. 10. März 2011 · Annie Wood Besant. Cambridge University Press, Mar 10, 2011 - Biography & Autobiography - 396 pages. When Annie Besant (1847-1933) wrote in her 1893 Autobiography that her life was 'much attacked and slandered' she was only 45 years old, and many more controversies were yet to come. In this book, Besant charts her dramatic political and ethical ...

  6. 16. Dez. 2022 · Introduction. Annie Wood Besant (1 Oct. 1847–20 Sept. 1933) was a controversial and polarizing figure in her own time and remains so even today. Three-quarters Irish, born in central London, she expanded her scope worldwide, along the way encompassing the roles of social reformer, women’s rights advocate, and religious leader.

  7. 13. Okt. 2017 · Annie Besant, tout en restant dans la pensée réformatrice de Bradlaugh, multiplia les discours et articles de plus en plus sociaux, et considérait que la dénonciation du capitalisme par Hyndman faisait sens. À l’automne 1884, elle prépara une série d’articles suggérant aux libres-penseurs de se rapprocher des socialistes avec qui ils avaient des points communs.