Rosemary Haughton

Rosemary Elena Konradin Haughton (née Luling; born 13 April 1927, London) is a British-born Roman Catholic lay theologian, who has also resided in the United States.[1]

The daughter of Peter Luling and Sylvia Thompson Luling, she has two sisters, Dr. Virginia Luling (died 2013), and Elizabeth Dooley (née Luling; died 1962). She attended the Farnham Girls' Grammar School, Queen's College, London, and the Slade School of Art. She married Algernon Haughton in 1948; the couple had 10 children.[2]

Publications

  • The Passionate God
  • The Catholic Thing
  • The Transformation of Man
  • The Drama of Salvation
  • The Tower That Fell
  • Images for Change
  • Tales from Eternity
  • Elizabeth's Greetings
  • Song in a Strange Land
  • The Re-Creation of Eve
  • The Theology of Experience

Other

Rosemary and Algernon Haughton founded the Lothlorien Community in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland in the 1970s. Since 1989 this thriving community has been managed by ROKPA International. Haughton is also the founder of the Wellspring Community in the United States.

Sources

  • Ryan, Eilish (1997). Rosemary Haughton: Witness to Hope. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-55612-860-8.
  • International Who's Who (2012; 75th edition), p. 809. Routledge: London & New York; ISBN 978-1-85743-607-5.
gollark: Add more turrets then.
gollark: It's still not enough.
gollark: Oh, you need more iron. Of course you do.
gollark: Make more iron gears.
gollark: There is no situation in which this would be beneficial, except something incredibly contrived like some of the power poles being missing but the boilers and inserters still working.

References


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