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单词 william penn
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William Penn


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Noun1.William Penn - Englishman and Quaker who founded the colony of Pennsylvania (1644-1718)William Penn - Englishman and Quaker who founded the colony of Pennsylvania (1644-1718)Penn

William Penn


William Penn
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BirthplaceLondon, England
Died

Penn, William,

1644–1718, English Quaker, founder of PennsylvaniaPennsylvania
, one of the Middle Atlantic states of the United States. It is bordered by New Jersey, across the Delaware River (E), Delaware (SE), Maryland (S), West Virginia (SW), Ohio (W), and Lake Erie and New York (N).
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, b. London, England; son of Sir William PennPenn, Sir William,
1621–70, British admiral. In the English civil war he served in Parliament's naval forces, and he joined the pursuit (1651–52) of Prince Rupert in the Mediterranean.
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.

Early Life

He was expelled (1662) from Oxford for his religious nonconformity and was then sent by his father to the Continent to overcome his leanings toward Puritanism. He continued his religious studies, however, and in Ireland, where he had been sent (1666) to oversee the family estates, he became a staunch member of the Society of Friends. He was imprisoned (1668) for writing a tract (The Sandy Foundation Shaken) against the doctrine of the Trinity, but, undaunted, he wrote No Cross, No Crown and Innocency with Her Open Face while in the Tower of London. After his release (1669), Penn continued his writing, his many tracts including The Great Case of Liberty of Conscience (1670), in which he argued for religious toleration. He also went on preaching missions through England, the Netherlands, and Germany.

In the American Colonies

Penn became involved in the affairs of the American colonies when in 1675 he was appointed a trustee for Edward Byllynge, one of the two Quaker proprietors of West Jersey. He helped draw up Concessions and Agreements, a liberal charter of government for the Quakers settling there. In 1681, Penn and 11 others purchased East Jersey (see New JerseyNew Jersey,
Middle Atlantic state of the E United States. It is bordered by New York State (N and, across the Hudson River and New York Harbor, E), the Atlantic Ocean (E), Delaware, across Delaware Bay and River (SW), and Pennsylvania, across the Delaware River (W).
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). In the same year, in payment of a debt owed his father, Penn obtained from King Charles II a charter for Pennsylvania (named by the king for Penn's father) for the establishment of his "holy experiment," a colony where religious and political freedom could flourish. Shortly afterward he received a grant of the Three Lower Counties-on-the-Delaware (present Delaware) from the duke of York (later James II).

In 1682, Penn went to his province, where the earliest settlers were already laying out the city of Philadelphia in accordance with his plans. He drew up a liberal Frame of Government for the colony. He also established the friendly relations with the Native Americans that were to distinguish the early history of Pennsylvania. Returning to England (1684), he asserted his boundary claims against Charles CalvertCalvert, Charles, 3d Baron Baltimore,
1637–1715, second proprietor of Maryland. He was sent over as deputy governor of that province in 1661 by his father, Cecilius Calvert, 2d Baron Baltimore, and at his father's
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, 3d Lord Baltimore.

Penn's friendship with James II led to his being accused of treason after that king's deposition (1688), and his colony was briefly (1692–94) annexed to New York. Penn continued writing religious and political tracts and preached extensively. Difficulties in Pennsylvania caused his return there for a short time (1699–1701), and he issued a new constitution, the Charter of Privileges (1701), granting more power to the provincial assembly.

Penn's last years were troubled ones. His own steward swindled him to such an extent that he was imprisoned (1707–8) for debt, and the continued difficulties of his colony and troubles concerning his eldest son caused him much grief. A stroke in 1712 removed him from active life.

Bibliography

See M. M. and R. S. Dunn, ed., The Papers of William Penn (5 vol., 1981–87); biographies by W. I. Hull (1937) and M. M. Dunn (1967); A. Pound, The Penns of Pennsylvania and England (1932); E. C. O. Beatty, William Penn as Social Philosopher (1939, repr. 1974); V. Buranelli, The King & the Quaker (1962); M. B. Endy, Jr., William Penn and Early Quakerism (1973).

Penn, William

 

Born Oct. 14, 1644, in London; died July 30, 1718, in Ruscombe, Berkshire. English political figure.

Penn was a Quaker. In 1681 he received a charter from King Charles II granting the right of feudal possession of a sizable territory in North America. Here he founded a colony later known as Pennsylvania. An assembly of colonists helped administer the colony, in which religious tolerance was proclaimed. After 1684, Penn lived chiefly in England.

Penn, William

(1644–1718) religious leader, colonist; born in London, England. The son of Admiral Sir William Penn, he was attracted to first the Puritan, then the Quaker faiths. A devout and active Quaker, he wrote No Cross, No Crown (1669) and The Great Case of Liberty of Conscience (1670). In 1681 King Charles II made Penn the sole proprietor of the land north of Maryland in payment for loans made by Admiral Penn to the crown (the land was named Pennsylvania for the late Admiral). Penn wrote a Frame of Government (1682), which granted religious freedom. He cultivated and maintained warm, friendly relations with the Indians. Although he is known as the founder of the Pennsylvania colony, he lived there only briefly (1682–83, 1699–1701) due to the necessity of defending his proprietorship to King William after the Glorious Revolution in England. After granting a permanent Charter (1701), he returned to England and did not return to his colony.

William Penn


  • noun

Synonyms for William Penn

noun Englishman and Quaker who founded the colony of Pennsylvania (1644-1718)

Synonyms

  • Penn
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