Henry Venn

E279475

Henry Venn was an influential 18th-century English evangelical clergyman and leader in the Clapham Sect, known for his role in the early Evangelical Revival within the Church of England.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (2)

Label Occurrences
Henry Venn canonical 2
Henry Venn (younger) 1

Statements (43)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Christian theologian
English Anglican priest
evangelical clergyman
religious writer
affiliation Church of England
clericalStyle Reverend
countryOfCitizenship Kingdom of Great Britain
educatedAt Cambridge University
Jesus College, Cambridge
ethnicGroup English
familyName Venn
fatherOf Henry Venn self-linksurface differs
surface form: Henry Venn (younger)

John Venn
genre Christian devotional literature
theological writing
givenName Henry
hasOccupation parish priest
hasRole leader in the Evangelical Revival
mentor to younger evangelical clergy
influenced Anglican evangelicalism
surface form: British evangelical Anglicanism

Clapham Sect
knownFor pastoral zeal and evangelical preaching
promoting personal piety and practical holiness
languageOfWorkOrName English
memberOf Clapham Sect
movement Evangelical Revival in Britain
surface form: Evangelical Revival

Evangelicalism
notableFor influence on the Clapham Sect
leadership in the early Evangelical Revival in the Church of England
notableWork The Complete Duty of Man
occupation author
clergyman
preacher
partOf 18th-century English evangelical movement
positionHeld vicar of Huddersfield
vicar of Yelling, Cambridgeshire
religion Christianity
religiousDenomination Church of England
sexOrGender male
sphereOfInfluence Anglican evangelical clergy
English Protestantism
workLocation Huddersfield
Yelling, Cambridgeshire

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

John Venn father Henry Venn
Clapham Sect hasMember Henry Venn
Henry Venn fatherOf Henry Venn self-linksurface differs
this entity surface form: Henry Venn (younger)