QUAKER MEETING HOUSES IN BRISTOL
Talk: Tuesday 26 October, 19.30
£6.00/£4.00 concessions
David Butler, author of ‘Quaker Meeting Houses in Britain’,
will be giving a talk on the architecture of Quaker Meeting Houses.
2004 marks 350 years of Quakers in Bristol. This talk coincides
with the exhibition on show at The Architecture from Tuesday 28
September to Sunday 31 October. This is part of a programme celebrating
this rich history of Quakers in the city, and features photographs
of the local Quaker Meeting Houses, taken by Bristol architect
and Quaker, James Bruges.
As Quakers refused to swear oaths of allegiance to the Crown
or pay Church tithes, they were persecuted – barred from
universities, and hence from the professions. Instead, they went
into trade, banking and industry, and came to play a major role
in the industrial revolution, and in Bristol.
Quakers founded many well-known companies, including the chocolate-makers
Frys, Rowntrees, and Cadburys. They campaigned against slavery
and war, and for prison reform and social justice. Quaker meetings
are mainly held in silence, although anyone may feel inspired
to speak. There is no doctrine and no priest, therefore the design
of the Meeting Houses is quite different to other places of worship.
> back to current events
|