Sunday Library for Household Reading

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Sunday Library for Household Reading is a British series of children's religious biographies and histories.[1] It was published by Macmillan from 1868, and edited by Frances Martin.[2] The intended audience has been identified as families reading after church service on Sunday.[3]

The works appeared in monthly parts at one shilling, as

part publishing
.

Number Year Author Title
I 1868 Charlotte Mary Yonge The Pupils of St. John the Divine[4]
II 1868 Charles Kingsley The Hermits[5]
III 1868
Frederic William Farrar
Seekers after God[6]
IV 1868
George Macdonald
England's Antiphon[7]
V 1869 François Guizot Saint Louis and Calvin, translation by Frances Martin[8]
VI 1869 Catherine Winkworth Christian Singers of Germany[9]
VII 1869
George Frederick Maclear
Apostles of Mediæval Europe[10]
VIII 1869 Thomas Hughes Alfred the Great[11]
IX 1870 Annie Keary The Nations Around[12]
X 1870
R. W. Church
St. Anselm[13]
XI 1868
Mrs. Oliphant
Saint Francis of Assisi[14]
XII 1871 Charlotte Yonge Pioneers and Founders; or, Recent Workers in the Mission Field[15]

Notes

  1. ^ Thomas Rawson Birks (1873). First Principles of Moral Science a Course of Lectures Delivered in the University of Cambridge Thomas Rawson Birks. Macmillan and Company. pp. 1–.
  2. required.)
  3. .
  4. .
  5. .
  6. ^ Lee, Sidney, ed. (1912). "Farrar, Frederic William" . Dictionary of National Biography (2nd supplement). Vol. 2. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  7. .
  8. .
  9. .
  10. ^ George Frederick Maclear (1869). Apostles of Mediæval Europe.
  11. .
  12. ^ Annie Keary (1870). The Nations Around. Macmillan & Company.
  13. ^ Richard William Church (1870). Saint Anselm. Macmillan.
  14. ^ Saint Francis (of Assisi) (1868). Francis of Assisi. By Mrs. Oliphant. [Sunday Library. The Sunday Library for Household Reading.].
  15. ^ Charlotte Mary Yonge (1871). Pioneers and Founders, or Recent workers in the mission field. Macmillan.