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12 octets ajoutés ,  31 août 2011 à 10:33
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[[image:John_Wroe.jpg|John Wroe|300px|thumb]]
 
[[image:John_Wroe.jpg|John Wroe|300px|thumb]]
'''John Wroe''', né à Bowling paroisse de Bradford dans le Yorkshire en Angleterre le 19 septembre 1782 dans une famille d'agriculteurs-mineurs de charbon, décédé le 5 février 1863 en Australie), illettré, fut d'abord disciple de Joanna Southcott<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joanna_Southcott</ref> (1792 - 1814). Puis il commença a avoir des visions, élabora sa propre doctrine, fut le fondateur de la Christian Israelite Church (Eglise des Israélites Chrétiens) et voyagea dans de nombreux pays dont les USA et l'Australie, où la Christian Israelite Church existe toujours. On appelait ses adeptes les wroeites et en Australie les barbus (beardies), un de ceux-ci fut [[Carl Friedrich Zimpel]], converti vers 1850, ambassadeur de l' Eglise des Israétiles-Chrétiens pour les pays francophones et germanophones, et qui endossa leur costume et coutumes (costume, chapeau spécifique et barbe non taillée)<ref>http://books.google.com/books?id=U2U9AAAAYAAJ&dq=vue%20du%20mois%20une%20nouvelle%20secte%20chr%C3%A9tienne%20connaissez%20vous%20john%20wro%C3%A9&hl=fr&pg=PA373&output=embed</ref>.
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'''John Wroe''' <ref>http://www.utopia-britannica.org.uk/pages/John%20Wroe.htm En anglais</ref>, né à Bowling paroisse de Bradford dans le Yorkshire en Angleterre le 19 septembre 1782 dans une famille d'agriculteurs-mineurs de charbon, décédé le 5 février 1863 en Australie), illettré, fut d'abord disciple de Joanna Southcott<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joanna_Southcott</ref> (1792 - 1814). Puis il commença a avoir des visions, élabora sa propre doctrine, fut le fondateur de la Christian Israelite Church (Eglise des Israélites Chrétiens) et voyagea dans de nombreux pays dont les USA et l'Australie, où la Christian Israelite Church existe toujours. On appelait ses adeptes les wroeites et en Australie les barbus (beardies), un de ceux-ci fut [[Carl Friedrich Zimpel]], converti vers 1850, ambassadeur de l' Eglise des Israétiles-Chrétiens pour les pays francophones et germanophones, et qui endossa leur costume et coutumes (costume, chapeau spécifique et barbe non taillée)<ref>http://books.google.com/books?id=U2U9AAAAYAAJ&dq=vue%20du%20mois%20une%20nouvelle%20secte%20chr%C3%A9tienne%20connaissez%20vous%20john%20wro%C3%A9&hl=fr&pg=PA373&output=embed</ref>.
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==Liens externes==
 
==Liens externes==
*http://www.utopia-britannica.org.uk/pages/John%20Wroe.htm En anglais
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*http://the-light.com/mens/samson/4/samson.html
 
*http://the-light.com/mens/samson/4/samson.html
 
*http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/data/book/history/9780750940771/prophet-john-wroe-virgins-scandals-and-visions-in-victorian-england Prophet' John Wroe (1782-1863), found fame through his many predictions, his preaching and the establishment of the Christian Israelite Church in the early 1820s. Under Wroe the Christian Israelites were surrounded by scandal and controversy. The best known of these is when Wroe publicly announced that he had received orders from heaven that seven virgins should be delivered to him to 'comfort and cherish him'. As might be expected, the girls did not remain virgins for long. Everywhere Wroe went scandal followed, whether financial or sexual, with extravagant building projects, including his own mansion, Melbourne House near Wakefield, forcing many of the sect's members into the workhouse. Edward Green is the first person to research Wroe's life and career in depth and to place him in the context of an industrialised society struggling to find values and needing to believe in themselves as the Chosen People. Using the original testimonies of many of those involved in the scandals surrounding Wroe his book is a celebration of a rich, if eccentric, tradition where religion, sex, politics and money struggle for possession of the nation's soul.
 
*http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/data/book/history/9780750940771/prophet-john-wroe-virgins-scandals-and-visions-in-victorian-england Prophet' John Wroe (1782-1863), found fame through his many predictions, his preaching and the establishment of the Christian Israelite Church in the early 1820s. Under Wroe the Christian Israelites were surrounded by scandal and controversy. The best known of these is when Wroe publicly announced that he had received orders from heaven that seven virgins should be delivered to him to 'comfort and cherish him'. As might be expected, the girls did not remain virgins for long. Everywhere Wroe went scandal followed, whether financial or sexual, with extravagant building projects, including his own mansion, Melbourne House near Wakefield, forcing many of the sect's members into the workhouse. Edward Green is the first person to research Wroe's life and career in depth and to place him in the context of an industrialised society struggling to find values and needing to believe in themselves as the Chosen People. Using the original testimonies of many of those involved in the scandals surrounding Wroe his book is a celebration of a rich, if eccentric, tradition where religion, sex, politics and money struggle for possession of the nation's soul.
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