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・ Samuel Bolton Colburn
・ Samuel Bond
・ Samuel Bond (MP)
・ Samuel Bongani Mfeka
・ Samuel Bonom
・ Samuel Bonsall Parish
・ Samuel Bookatz
・ Samuel Booth
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・ Samuel Bosire
・ Samuel Boteler Bristowe
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・ Samuel Botsford House
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・ Samuel Boulanger
Samuel Bourn
・ Samuel Bourn (disambiguation)
・ Samuel Bourn the Elder
・ Samuel Bourn the Younger
・ Samuel Bourne
・ Samuel Boutal
・ Samuel Boutflower
・ Samuel Bowden
・ Samuel Bowen
・ Samuel Bowers
・ Samuel Bowles
・ Samuel Bowles (economist)
・ Samuel Bowles (journalist)
・ Samuel Bowly
・ Samuel Bowman


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Samuel Bourn : ウィキペディア英語版
Samuel Bourn

Samuel Bourn (1714–1796) was an English Dissenter minister.〔
Bourn was the third Samuel Bourn and a second son of Samuel Bourn the Younger, and his wife, Hannah Harrison, a widow, nee Hannah Taylor of Kendal.
He was educated at Stand grammar school, Lancashire, and Glasgow University. In 1742 he became dissenting minister of Rivington, Lancashire, where he enjoyed the friendship of Hugh Willoughby, 15th Baron Willoughby of Parham. In 1754 Bourn moved to Norwich to assist the presbyterian minister John Taylor, who three years later left for Warrington Academy.
==Life==
He was born at Crook near Kendal, and educated at Stand grammar school and Glasgow University, where he studied under Francis Hutcheson and John Simson. In 1742 he settled in the ministry at Rivington, Lancashire, where he enjoyed the friendship of Hugh, 15th Lord Willoughby of Parham, who lived at Shaw Place, near Rivington, and was the representative of the last of the presbyterian noble families. He was a fundamental scripturalist, a bible protestant, who relied solely on the witness of the New Testament in matter of doctrine and ethics.
Bourn was not ordained till some years after his settlement. He then made a lengthy declaration (printed by Joshua Toulmin) dealing with the duties of the ministry and allowing no doctrine or duty except those taught in the ''New Testament''. Bourn lived partly at Leicester Mills, a wooded vale near Rivington, and partly at Bolton. In 1752 the publication of his first sermon under the title ''The Rise, Progress, Corruption and Declension of the Christian Religion'', led to overtures from the presbyterian congregation at Norwich, and in 1754, apparently after the death of the senior minister, Peter Finch, Bourn became the colleague of Dr.John Taylor. The Norwich presbyterians had laid the first stone of a new meeting-house on 25 February 1754. When Bourn came to them they were worshipping in Little St. Mary's, an ancient edifice, then and still held by trustees for the Walloon or Huguenot Protestants. On 12 May 1756 was opened the new building, the Octagon Chapel, Norwich. Not long after Bourn lost £1,000, which he had risked in his brother Daniel Bourn's cotton mill venture. Among those brought up under his ministry was Sir James Edward Smith, founder of the Linnean Society.〔
When in 1757 Taylor left Norwich to fill the divinity chair at Warrington Academy, Bourn obtained as colleagues first John Hoyle, and afterwards Robert Alderson, subsequently a lawyer, and father of Edward Hall Alderson. When Bourn became incapable of work, Alderson had to discharge the whole duty, and was accordingly ordained on 13 September 1775.〔

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